‘Comings and Goings’ exhibition at Don’t Look Gallery, Sydney

Andrew Newman, is launching his new online project Comings and Goings with an exhibition at Don’t Look Experimental New Media Gallery. The performative project explores the abstract of the daily grind that exists in most modern professions, where people are at pains to exactly explain what they do each day. The sociologist Manuel Castells wrote that ‘the process of work is at the core of social structure’, yet most processes at work have become become so ambiguous and detached from any primary action or mode of production that workers now inhabit an absurd Beckett-like state of existence.

Comings and Goings
is a blog that documents Newman’s studio entrances and exits. The repetitive documentation inverts the actual art object in time and space. Photographs of his entrances are titled ‘Andrew Newman enters the studio for purpose of making art’ and his exits are titled ‘Andrew Newman exits his studio having made art.’ The inversion of the artwork through the framing of its production encourages the imagination of the artwork itself. Drawing parallels with Heidegger’s definition of ‘the thing’ these photographic bookends of moments of time illustrate that an artwork can exist not through the material in which it is formed but rather by the emptiness that is shaped through the documentation of its production. This imagination of the void is possible through repeats in photography as opposed to the repetitive image of video or film because by its nature photography misses moments of time. These missing moments extend the imaginary space, allowing the viewer to participate in the production of the image. As Godard said, ‘A story should have a beginning, a middle and an end.. but not necessarily in that order.’ The documentation in Coming and Goings presents only the beginning and then the end, compelling the viewer to engage with the work and imagine the middle of the story.

Newman further abstracts himself from any acts of production by sending this photographic documentation of his studio entrances and exits to China where an artisan transforms the small webcam images into large oil paintings.

The exhibition opens at 6pm at Don’t Look Gallery on March 25 and runs until April 4, 2009.

Don’t Look Experimental New Media Gallery
419 New Canterbury Rd, Dulwich Hill
Open Thursday to Saturday
11 – 5pm


About

Andrew Newman is a media artist and writer based in Sydney. In 2008 he completed his Master of Visual Arts at the Sydney College of the Arts researching the impact of new communication technologies on the art of writing love letters. Newman’s art practice unravels what he considers the conflict between the two desires for the other, drawn from two Greek gods, the sons of Aphrodite. Pothos, a desire for the absent being, and Himeros, the more burning desire for the present being. Through his work Newman reveals the absurd alienation of the individual, forever disconnected by these desires.