Preview

Gordon Bennett Artist

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
252 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Gordon Bennett Artist
GORDON BENNETT
Gordon Bennett was born on 8 October 1955 in Monto, Queensland of Aboriginal and English/Scottish heritage. Bennett enrolled as a mature–age student at Queensland College of Art in 1986 and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (Fine Arts) degree in 1988.
Gordon Bennett is a contemporary artist and says his earlier art work where influenced by his personal experiences. Bennett’s work is defining Australian Culture and Aboriginal History, he wanted to change the way Australia and the world saw Indigenous Australians. Bennett includes a focus on the role and power of language, including visual representations, in shaping identity, culture, social issues and history.
Bennett’s work alludes to visual and verbal violence of history of black and white relations, his scenes from outside Australia, deconstructing history and exposing the ideologies and structures that shape history.
Bennett works both in traditional easel paintings and in multi-media, Photography, printmaking, video, performance and installation. The critical and aesthetic strategies of postmodernism have had significant impact on the development of his art practice. His work is layered and complex and often incorporates images, styles or references drawn from sources such as social history text books, western art history and Indigenous art.
The emphasis on making ‘art about art’ which is the focus of his non-representational abstract paintings, contrasts clearly with the focus on social critique that was integral to Bennett’s earlier work, and is intended to provoke viewers thinking and opens up new possibilities for understanding the subjects he

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Throughout Bennett’s life, he experienced a “...personal struggle for identity as an Australian of Aboriginal and Anglo-Celtic descent” (ngv, n/a). Resultantly, such subject matter of identity, culture, history and misperception is not only evident in TROGE, but throughout his oeuvre in works like Outsider (1955) to Possession Island (1991) and beyond. Due to his wariness of labels, Bennett preferred to be represented as a contemporary artist, rather than an Aboriginal artist, and thus avoided selling works to “...indigenous sections of state galleries...” (smh, 2014). As such, TROGE belongs to the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery (smh, 2014). Prevalent throughout Bennett’s oeuvre is the “...appropriat[ion] and recontextualis[ation] [of] found images that have accumulated certain historical meaning over time” and this appears in TROGE with the newspaper clipping of his mother, and the recontextualisation of an indigenous man from JW Lindt’s photograph (smh, 2014; ngv, n/a). Such technique creates evidence to support Bennett’s artworks, and in TROGE reinforces his realisation that “[his] identity was shaped by the historical narratives of colonialism with all its romantic illusions and factual deletions” (smh, 2014). TROGE has clearly been influenced by Bennett’s experiences and…

    • 878 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Art 101 Week 1 Assignment

    • 582 Words
    • 3 Pages

    An artist can create art work through a creative process. An element of this process is critical thinking. Artists’ creativity process begins with seeing. It then goes from seeing to imagining and from imagining to making (Sayre, 2009). This essay will provide an explanation of artists’ roles. The essay will also include two chosen works of art, one of which embodies the role of the artist and the other holds symbolic significance requiring the application of iconography.…

    • 582 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Clement Greenberg (1909-1994) was possibly the most prominent and influential art critic of the twenty-first century. Greenberg’s intensely influential focus was on the notion of “formal purity” and how that affected the work itself in a painting just being a painting and “orientating itself to flatness” as modernist paintings had. Additionally, Clement Greenberg found interest in Abstract Expressionism and how Greenberg’s strictly outlined theories on art would inspire artists of the Minimalist and Pop Art movements to respond in kind with their own art as a rebuttal.…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He exposes past historians for ignoring violence, such as one who claimed ‘Australia was the only country which had been acquired by peaceful occupation’. Reynolds argues that this ignorance prevents Australians from coming to terms with their past, and his criticism is conveyed by his metaphoric classification of the omission as the ‘Great Australian Silence’. He holds that colonisation involved constant violent conflict between settlers and indigenous tribes. To support his view, Reynolds highlights the openness with which violence was admitted and discussed in the colonial era. In Chapter 9 he includes the account of a settler who wrote, ‘our best shots are after them…there will be weeping and wailing shortly’. The writer’s callous attitude to brutality reflects the ubiquitous presence of violence Reynolds wishes to portray. Consequently, he concludes in Chapter 14 that the conflict was part of an invasion process intended to ‘terrorise the indigenous peoples into acquiescence’. Reynolds links this past mistreatment of indigenous Australians to the present day social injustice they face, recalling one lawyer’s statement that ‘he could not bring himself to believe that killing a black man was as serious a matter as killing a white one’. The confession illustrates the way…

    • 1083 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gordan Bennett

    • 566 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Bennett identifies with the world through people, events and issues involving the aboriginal people. His work is political about both Aboriginal and European-Australian history. It helps him and his people to redress the disparity between the two cultures. Many of his views about Aboriginal culture have been understandably formulated from a European perspective. His shocking, violent and traumatic work was painted while Bennett was still at art school. The painting raises many issues from Aboriginal deaths in custody to Bennett’s feeling of isolation. Frustration is also evident with the suggestion that it can lead people to suicide or self-mutilation, as in the case of both Van Gogh and the figure in the picture.…

    • 566 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ronald Gillespie

    • 267 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Ronald J Gillespie was born August 21, 1924 in London England. He attended the University of London graduating with his B.Sc in 1945, and a PH.D in 1949. After graduating, he became an Assistance Lecturer and then a Lecturer in the chemistry department. He moved to Canada in 1958, where he became a professor at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.…

    • 267 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Roy Lichtenstein

    • 563 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In the city of New York a future artist was born. Roy Lichtenstein. He was brought up in a middle class Jewish family. His father was a real estate broker named Milton and his mother, Beatrice Werner, was a homemaker. His interest in art started as a hobby in school. In 1939, when he was in his last year of school he went to summer classes at the Art Students League of New York. Under the Tutelage of Reginald Marsh he worked and improved in his artistic skills.…

    • 563 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    David Hockney

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages

    David Hockney was born in Bradford in 1937. At an early age, he already knew what he wanted to do. He had won a scholarship to the Bradford Grammar School at the age of 11 and had already decided what he was going to do when he was older – become an artist. While in school, he drew for the school magazine and made posters for the schools debating society. At the age of 16 Hockney was able to persuade his parents to let him go to a local art school. After his enrollment, however, Hockney was forced to take up a job in a hospital instead of joining the National Service. He had registered as a conscientious objector to the service and war. After this he went to the Royal College Of Art in London to continue his studies, arriving there in 1959.…

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Surrealist Essay

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Many Surrealist artists are more recognizable as surrealists than other is as their work exemplifies surrealist themes rather than just a ‘style’ as Lloyd states. This establishes the notion that despite the range of visual differences amongst artists, the ideas and theories are what launch their motives within their work. This is seen within Renee Magritte’s reoccurring motif’s and Dali’s hyper realism as well as Max Ernst’s use of ‘frottage’ and texture as a means of communication of Breton and Freud’s theories.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Cited: Barrett, Terry. Why Is That Art?: Aesthetics and Criticism of Contemporary Art. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2008. Print.…

    • 2403 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gerhard Richter

    • 318 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Walking through the exhibition it is hard to believe one man painted all the images, many of which occupy opposite ends of the spectrum, yet each image is equally as effective. All though he’s devoted to paint, Richter uses a camera a great deal, painting from photographs more often than not, creating precise photorealistic images, however the next minute you will see a large canvas in the style of an abstract-expressionist, smudging and smearing paint everywhere.…

    • 318 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Roy Lichtenstein Essay

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In 1963, Roy Lichtenstein was 40. He was producing a series of seminal works that took comic-strip images and reinvented them as large paintings. In doing so he established himself in an unassailable position in the Pop Art movement and in the American art world. Five years later in January 1968 to coincide with the retrospective of Lichtenstein at the Tate Gallery, Studio International published a major, even seminal article by Lawrence Alloway, together with and preceded by one by Richard Hamilton. Hamilton was quick to examine, in Lichtenstein's case, the issue of transformation, the rejection of the idea of composition, replaced by, 'the conflict of flatness and illusory space' that 'reveals a superficial concern with style. It is a curious fact that these obsessions, a baroque love of decoration and a delight in illusion, often go together. In any essentially mannerist art it is in the extremity of the stance that the glory lies. Lichtenstein is marvellously…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Racism Theme in No Sugar

    • 607 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Throughout Australian history a racist attitude towards Aboriginals has been a significant issue. The instant the early settlers arrived on our shores and colonised, the Aboriginals have been fighting for the survival of their culture. The Aboriginals have been oppressed and dominated to bring them in line with an idealistic European society. Racism, as practiced against Aborigines, has been defined as the ‘conscious or unconscious belief in the superiority of persons from European ancestry, which entitles all white peoples to a position of dominance or privilege determined by racial origin'. This theme of racism has been put forward by Jack Davis in his stage play, No Sugar, the story of an Aboriginal family's fight for survival during the Great Depression. Jack Davis uses a white medium to present Aboriginal views as a revisionist text. He has used what has been termed "jarring witness" as one who questions and disrupts the versions of others. In this case the Aboriginals present their version of the past which seriously undermines accepted accounts of the official past proposed by white Australians. In communicating the racist and unfriendly attitudes of the leading white ideology, Davis constructs characters, which are continuously under fire and in opposition to the oppressing dominant white society. Davis utilises his characters to confront the audience and…

    • 607 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Langton (1993) claims that due to the lack of understanding of aboriginality, critics find it hard to comment on Aboriginal content (23). Langton goes further to insinuate that the lack of critique is linked to racism as it results in Aboriginal film been invisible. Langton supports this when she says, “the easiest and most ‘natural’ form of racism in representation is the act of making the other invisible” (23). This position by Langton contradicts her earlier point. On one hand, she argues that the lack of critique is due to a lack of understanding as a result of no substantial literature. But on the other hand, she also says that it is a form of racism (23-24). It could be said that this is due to a lack of interest in white society to understand Aboriginality however this is subjective and not supported be any evidence.…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Francis Bacon

    • 374 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Motif  human frailty  shortcomings of the physical form  shortcomings of the inner self  eg. Subject is the terror of his screaming Popes of the clinging fear of his “Two Figures in a Window” (1953)…

    • 374 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays