Kathy Temin

Kathy Temin

1 August - 8 November 2009

Venue: Heide III: Central Galleries

Curator: Jason Smith & Sue Cramer


The Duck-Rabbit Problem

Kathy Temin
The Duck-Rabbit Problem    1991
synthetic fur, synthetic stuffing, wood, polystyrene, enamel paint
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Purchased through the Art Foundation of Victoria with the assistance of the Rudy Komon Fund, Governor, 1998
© Kathy Temin

Kathy Temin is a critically-acclaimed Melbourne-based artist who has exhibited her work nationally and internationally for the past twenty years. Temin is central to a generation of artists who influentially reasserted the use of unconventional materials and installation formats in contemporary sculptural practice in the early 1990s. Her highly idiosyncratic objects embrace a do-it-yourself aesthetic, and her seemingly haphazard constructions of MDF and fake fur confront the art-historical legacies of modernism and formalist abstraction. Temin’s work engages with her personal history, Jewish cultural heritage, and with the trash and treasure aesthetics of global pop culture. This survey will consider her contribution to Australian art, achieved through an individual and biographical synthesis of materials and attachment to art, history and consumer culture.

For more information, read the Kathy Temin media release.

EXHIBITION PARTNER

This project has been assisted by the Australian
Government through the Australia Council for
the Arts, its art funding and advisory body

This exhibition is generously supported by the Besen Family Foundation

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