Made To Last,
Touring exhbition with NETS Victoria
Art Gallery of Ballarat,
Alongside: Brook Andrew, Claire Anna Watson, Juan Ford and Penny Byrne
Latrobe Regional Gallery 12.09.12 - 28.10.12
Art Gallery of Ballarat 12.12.12 - 20.01.13
Manningham Art Gallery 27.02.13 - 28.03.13
Wangaratta Art Gallery 27.04.13 - 26.05.13
Queensland University of Technology Art Museum 03.08.13 - 22.09.13
McClelland Sculpture Park + Gallery 20.10.13 - 02.02.14
Charles Darwin University Art Gallery 10.04.14 - 27.06.14
Project Video here
The conservation of art is commonly associated with the restoration of seventeenth century easel paintings or marble sculptures from antiquity. Materials used in contemporary art have challenged this perception and necessitated a shift in the way conservators interact with artists. Knowledge of the artist’s intent, creative processes, materials and techniques, and accurate documentation, are all important tools employed by conservators in the preservation of contemporary art.
The profession has adapted alongside artists in their use of materials, techniques and technology. The twentieth century saw a rapid increase in the availability of existing and new materials, particularly with the boom in mass production in the 1920s and mass consumption post World War II. Artists were now able to express their creativity in ways not previously possible.
An interdisciplinary approach to gathering information on the artists and materials is also important; communicating with curators, artist’s assistants, fabricators, scientists and the public is recognised as essential in developing decision-making strategies for conserving works of art. Establishing the artists’ intent involves ascertaining not only how the artist wants the work to look but also how the work is to be displayed.
Made to last: the conservation of art brings together five living contemporary artists who use a range of complex materials in their work: Brook Andrew, Penny Byrne, Juan Ford, Ghostpatrol and Claire Anna Watson. While some materials a conservator encounters may be unstable, a different kind of instability is evident in the themes of the five artists included in Made to last, involving the impact of humanity on the world – past, present and future.
There is no one solution to conserving contemporary art; an artist may have strong views on the conservation of their practice, and this view may vary for individual bodies of work. Documentation and dialogue regarding an artist’s intent and materials and techniques used are important tools for conservators, curators and private collectors to utilise in order to preserve important culture for future generations.