AirSpace Projects Exhibitions
Continue Until
19, 20 and 21 November
The Artists Will Be Present
On Saturday 21 November 11-5pm
Come and Join Us
Gallery One
Sally Clarke: She Bush
Gallery Two
Jan Fieldsend: Massed Arrangements
The Cranny
Sophie Clague: Distillates
Deep Space
Maria Miranda and Norie Neumark Shredded
Outer Space
Sarah Newall’s Rocket Stove
Four New Exhibitions Open 11am November 6
Opening Event: Friday 6 November 6-8pm
with
A Musical Performance by Kate She Bush
with a brief Introduction on the Labiaphone by Nedella Kelly, 6.30pm
Gallery One
Sally Clarke
She Bush
Gallery Two
Jan Fieldsend
Massed Arrangements
The Cranny
Sophie Clague
Distillates
Deep Space
Maria Miranda and Norie Neumark
Stuplimity and the Aesthetics of Neo-Liberalism
Outer Space
Sarah Newall
Girl Shed III continues
© 2015. All images copyright of the artists.
AirSpace Projects is now closed until Friday 2 October, when four new exhibitions activate the space.
Join the artists for opening drinks
Friday 2 October 6-8pm
GALLERY ONE
Marlene Sarroff
Sustained Expansion
GALLERY TWO
Allison M. Low
Oddlings
THE CRANNY
Marikit Santiago
Altar Ego
DEEP SPACE
Anna Kirk
Optical Avatar
Please highlight Upcoming Exhibitions under Exhibitions and Proposals on the AirSpace Projects menu to find out more.
Images top to bottom
Marlene Sarroff, Installation view multiple visions and (mis-steps), 2015. Courtesy of the artist.
Allison M. Low, Dorothy, 2015, graphite and gouache on paper, 90 x 71cm. Courtesy of the artist.
Marikit Santiago, Malakas & Maganda, 2015, acrylic, oil and gold leaf on canvas, 120 x 160cm. Courtesy of the artist.
Anna Kirk, Optical Avatar, 2015. Courtesy of the artist.
All images copyright of the artists ©2015
SEPTEMBER EXHIBITIONS
Friday 4 – Saturday 19 September 2015
Please join us for opening drinks
Saturday 5 September 3.00-5.00pm
AirSpace Projects 10 Junction Street Marrickville Sydney
GALLERY ONE
‘Glitter is going under!’ So declared Le Corbusier in his critique of ornament. I like to imagine him emphatically banging a lectern with his fist when he says this, or maybe it’s uttered with a cool and confident voice in a smoky men’s club while sipping whisky. There’s no glitter or gilded edges in our installation; but there is flocking, felt, golden curves and ornament with no formal function.
‘Decadence’, mutters Le Corbusier.
GALLERY TWO
Francesca Mataraga and Merryn J Trevethan
Merryn J Trevethan’s work focuses on the uncertainty of perception, using colour to explore the complexity of vision. In this exhibition, Trevethan presents works from her Storm Series of Artist books, objects and recent paintings that distill her daily perceptions and tease out the spatial relationships found in the densely populated architectural environment, as viewed from the 12th storey of her apartment block in Singapore.
Francesca Mataraga presents floor fragment (2015), a sculptural piece and a hypothetical installation. As with other work in this series it explores colour, pattern and form through experimentation with scale, by adapting a pre-existing stripped fabric pattern to an architectural situation.
Image: Merryn J Trevethan, The Siege Mentality, 2015 (left). Francesca Mataraga, floor fragment, 2015 (right). Both images courtesy of the artists.
The Cranny, Deep Space and Outer Space
Sarah Newall: Girl Shed III
Girl Shed III is the third iteration and will be the last part to complete the sustainability garden project in the courtyard of AirSpace Projects. Girl Shed is a ramshackle free-form shed designed to provide a creative space and water catchment for the garden. Over the course of the exhibition Sarah Newall will be living onsite creating art that will change and develop the exhibiting space as well as doing daily menial tasks: cleaning, cooking, eating and gardening.
Image courtesy of Sarah Newall.
Current Exhibitions
on view until Saturday 22 August
AirSpace Projects open from 11.00am Thursday, Friday and Saturday
10 Junction Street Marrickville
Galleries One and Two
Paintings by Mum
Brenda Samuels
Curated by Miranda Samuels
Throughout her life Brenda has been a prolific painter. Despite her passion and talent, however, domestic and familial responsibilities have always taken priority over her art practice.
In response to this, Brenda and Miranda came up with a domestic-artistic arrangement that would allow Brenda to focus on her painting and produce a significant body of work for this show. It involves the use of housework as a curatorial strategy whereby Miranda, in her role as curator, fulfils a share of her domestic responsibilities each week so that she can maximise her time spent painting.
Here, cleaning, sweeping and mundane errands are ascribed artistic and economic value in the form of contemporary art; i.e. eight hours of washing, tidying and cooking = one small oil painting
Brenda and Miranda’s partnership has given rise to many fruitful discussions regarding women in the art-world, mother-daughter collaborations, the artistic value of housework and reproductive labour, housework as a curatorial strategy, emerging middle-aged female artists, and the contemporary relevance of the 1970’s International Wages For Housework Campaign.
Brenda will exhibit her most recent body of work – a series of small still-life paintings that depict objects emblematic of contemporary consumerist culture. In her impasto renderings of anti-ageing moisturiser bottles, takeaway coffee cups and cans of home-brand beetroot, she invites viewers to reflect on a number of things; the seduction of packaging, our quest for youthfulness and the geopolitics of food consumption to name a few.
Image: Brenda Samuels, Yakult from Japan, 2014, oil on canvas, 30 x 30 cm. Photo credit: Simon Hewson
The Cranny
Matthew James
An Endless Horizon
Photographs lack the peripheral experience of viewing a scene first hand; images often don’t match up to how we perceive a landscape first hand. This is especially the case when looking out to sea; An Endless Horizon is a series of images exploring the peripheral view. Using a self-developed photographic process, Matt captures images of the ocean that cover a whole roll of 120 photographic slide film, an attempt to make the largest image possible within the constrains of the medium.
Image: Matthew James, An Endless Horizon, 2014/15, velvia Slide film, wooden lightbox, 20 x 20 x 90cm each. Photo Credit: Matthew James.
Deep Space
Suzy Faiz
Video One Painting
One installation
One painting
One video
One poster
Suzy Faiz’ work addresses the materials, conventions, styles and histories of painting. It attempts to extend the traditions that it emerges from. She creates paintings as they allow for the continuation of notions of freedom; something that is significant in both art and life.
Suzy Faiz’ work deals with recent contemporary attitudes towards abstraction and can be seen to be working within and against this framework by experimenting with different techniques and solutions within the practice of painting.
Catch these shows before 5pm Saturday 25 July!
Five jewellery-related exhibitions continue at AirSpace Projects until 5.00pm Saturday 25 July even though the Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia’s (JMGA) conference edgesbordersgaps has now concluded. The language of jewellery can be found in expected yet inventive ways and also extends to installation and experimental media. Come and visit AirSpace Projects Thursday-Saturday from 11.00am until Saturday 25 July! We look forward to seeing you.
Only 6 minutes walk from Marrickville Station
GALLERY 1
Theatre of Detail
Works by the current partners of Adelaide’s Gray Street Workshop, Jess Dare, Sue Lorraine and Catherine Truman to celebrate the 30th Anniversary of this internationally renowned Artist-Run Initiative.
GALLERY 2
Profile ’15
The JMGA (NSW) Profile ’15 Award exhibition. See ‘Current Exhibitions’ to find out who the recipients of the Award were this year! You will also find the Exhibition Room Sheet with many wonderful works for sale!
THE CRANNY
Lisa Furno
wear

THE BASEMENT WALL
Brenda Factor
Deeply Untitled
When good household items turn bad …
DEEP SPACE
Bridget Kennedy
Choice Mate
Choice Mate, an installation covering the gallery floor with thousands of small objects. They look like rocks. Almost. But not quite.
JULY EXHIBITIONS
To coincide with edgesbordersgaps, the Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia’s biennial conference (10-12 July), AirSpace Projects and SquarePeg Studios bring you SIX exhibitions by contemporary jewellery artists.
Please join us for opening drinks
Friday 10 July 6.00-8.00pm
Opening night proudly supported by
Theatre of Detail
Jess Dare, Sue Lorraine and Catherine Truman
Celebrating the 30th anniversary of Adelaide’s Gray Street Workshop, an internationally renowned artist-run initiative.
Julie Ewington, independent writer, curator and broadcaster will open the exhibition at 6.30pm
An exhibition of new work by current workshop partners Jess Dare, Sue Lorraine and Catherine Truman in which the artists, united by a shared fascination with the adaption of nature and the wonders of science, unravel concepts of scale, time and material specificity.
Artists’ Talk Monday 13 July, 6.00pm
Image: Catherine Truman, In Preparation for Seeing: Cell Culture Glove. 2015. Photo: Grant Hancock.
Profile ’15: a curated award exhibition
Profile ’15 is a significant curated award exhibition of contemporary jewellery, objects and metalsmithing by members of Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia NSW. With awards on offer for both emerging and established artists, there will be a diverse and comprehensive cross-section of work from some of our state’s most talented contemporary jewellers.
Dr Karin Findeis, Chair JMGA NSW, and Convenor of edgesbordersgaps will speak at 7pm followed by the announcement of the Profile ’15 Award winners.
Image: Majella Beck, We are all the same inside … red. 2012 Winner: Established category. Courtesy of Majella Beck.
Lisa Furno
wear
An experimental collection of work that uses the aid of a toaster oven to morph, twist and retract everyday plastics into new forms. This work was created while on a residency at MIT faculty of creative arts in Auckland, NZ in 2014.
Image: Lisa Furno, wear, 2014. Courtesy of Lisa Furno.
Brenda Factor
Deeply Untitled
When good household items turn bad …
Image: Brenda Factor, Deeply Untitled, 2015. Courtesy of the artist.
Bridget Kennedy
Choice Mate
Inspired by a month-long residency at Hill End, contemporary jewellery artist Bridget Kennedy creates a miniature landscape made from wax effigies of real rocks: discarded remnants of the town’s gold mining past. Visitors may decide to ‘mine’ the work, stake a claim and take a piece home.
Image: Bridget Kennedy, Choice Mate, 2015. Installation. Courtesy of the artist.
And next door at SquareSpace
For one night only
Survey: a show by the tenants of SquarePeg Studios
Image: Kate Ruby Hutchinson. Sublimated Earrings. 2015. Sublimated aluminium and sterling silver. Image courtesy of the artist.





































