Lockhart River Art Gang in America
The Lockhart River Art Gang is having a big year
in America now, following on the major exhibition mounted by the University of
Queensland and Sally Butler, Our
Way: Contemporary Aboriginal Art from Lockhart
River. The exhibition itself is
touring the United States, and is recently ended a successful run at the Charles
B. Wang Center at Stony Brook University, located on Long Island
just east of New York City. The Australian
took notice, as did the New York Times. Sally
Butler presented a lecture, "Art and Intellect in 21st Century Aboriginal Art"
at the University on October 10. Other Indigenous-themed events included
screenings of Ten Canoes,
and Darlene Johnson's films Stolen Generations
, and
Crocodile
Dreaming. Photographs of the
exhibition's opening, where Rosella Namok and Wayne Butcher spoke are available
here .

Installation view of Our Way at Stony Brook UniversityOur
Way moves on next to the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection at the
University of Virginia, where it will open on January 15 for a two-month run.
The University of Virginia is the only North American member of an international
consortium of universities that also includes the University of Queensland, and
to mark this collaboration Professor Terry E. Smith will deliver a University
Distinguished lecture on February 13, 2008. Smith is the Andrew W. Mellon
Professor of Contemporary Art History and Theory at the University of
Pittsburgh, and a Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Architecture at the
University of Sydney.Halfway across
the United States, there was more excitement surrounding recent work by the Art
Gang, at the Booker-Lowe Gallery in Houston. Artists Adrian
King, Leroy Platt, and Joanne Butcher joined Nana Booker for the opening
celebrations on November 1. The show feature small-to-mid-sized works y both
the established stars of Lockhart River as well as the "second generation" of
artists to emerge from the
community.I'm often asked about the
market for Aboriginal art in the United States, and always wind up referring to
Nana and her gallery, which is one of the few that specialize in Indigenous art
in this country. This is the second time that the Gang has visited Nana in
Houston, and from the looks of it, they once more had a wonderful time.
The current show is on until January
18, but that isn't the end of the story. Late January 2008 will see the arrival
at Booker-Lowe of more works from Lockhart River, as the larger canvases now on
display at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe,
New Mexico, arrive in Houston. Nana has been tireless in her enthusiasm for and
promotion of the Art Gang, and it's good to see these exhibitions helping to
raise their profile here in the US. To complete the circle, Nana will be
sending some of the work from the IAIA show on to the Kluge-Ruhe later in the
spring.Nana was also kind enough to
send me some photos from the opening at her
gallery.
Nana Booker is all smiles at the opening of
The Lockhart River Art Gang Returns
Leroy Platt and Adrian King
Camille Masson-Talansier, new arts coordinator at Lockhart River, with Joanne Butcher and Adrian King
Leroy Platt raises a toast to Australian-American Chamber of Commerce President Greg Foley, his wife Beverly, and a friend.
Posted: Sun - November 25, 2007 at 04:04 PM
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A collection of personal reflections and readings on the art of the indigenous people of Australia, their culture, anthropological studies, the art market, and whatever else strays across the cultural horizon.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please fee free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Nov 25, 2007 04:05 PM
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