VISUAL ARTS
BFashion Trails, The York Mill, 10 Henrietta Street, York. Fashion photographer Michelle Taylor invites viewers to step behind the scenes of the fashion world where millions of dollars are invested and the beautiful are born thin. Shattering images of model lifestyles and airbrushed perfection, this is the real life of the poetically unbalanced gypsies that travel in mass migration between the fashion capitals on the illusive fashion trail. It is the winter lights of a dim and seductive Milan, a grey cloaked secretive Paris, a bright eyed overt NY and the melancholy comforts of London.
Exhibition opens on Friday, September 3, and runs ’til Sunday, October 3.
New Work, Goddard de Fiddes Gallery, 31 Malcolm Street, West Perth. Goddard de Fiddes presents New Work, an exhibition featuring works by Patrick Doherty, Christian De Vietri, Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont, Rodney Glick, Jon Tarry, Justin Edward John Smith and Marcus Canning. The exhibition comes on the back of Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont’s win at the 17th Biennale Of Sydney. Gill and Dupont were recently awarded the prestigious Basil Seller Art Prize, pocketing $100,000 for video artwork Gymnasium 2010.
Exhibition opens on Friday, September 3, and runs ’til Saturday, September 25.
Objects To Live By: The Art Of John Meade, PICA, James Street, Northbridge. Featuring more than 17 sculptural works ranging in scale from intimate objects on table tops to architecturally scaled wall works, this exhibition brings together John Meade’s larger floor-based and suspended forms, smaller ‘table sculptures’, and an ensemble from a collaborative installation. Often employing geometry and soft organic forms, John Meade works in an intuitive way to materialise his ideas, creating tightly orchestrated pieces that explore the metaphysical, the surreal and the fetishistic.
Exhibition opens on Saturday, September 11, and runs ’til Sunday, October 24.
Dream Bore, Fremantle Arts Centre, 1 Finnerty Street, Fremantle. From Perth artist Mark Parfitt comes an investigation into one of WA’s most humble rituals. After moving into a new home, Parfitt discovered his backyard bore was not working. His attempt at repair and eventual failure marked the beginning of a journey that raises questions of sustainability, masculinity, the role of the State and recycling. His research led him to re-design his ‘Dream Bore’ in the galleries of Fremantle Arts Centre.
Exhibition runs ’til Sunday, September 19.
Darkrooming, Fremantle Arts Centre, 1 Finnerty Street, Fremantle. Over 3,000 components glow and oscillate in Darkrooming, an eerie installation by Melbourne artist Vera Möller. By contrasting the real and the imagined, Möller mutates the natural and illusory in this cabinet of curiosities. Her exhibition is a collection of hypothetical life forms that seem like they’ve been plucked from under the deepest of seas. Her specimens are inspired to blur the boundaries between natural, artificial and illusory life forms.
Exhibition runs ’til Sunday, September 19.
Kiss And Fly, Emerge Art Space, 676A Beaufort Street, Mt Lawley. Iraqi born artist Ayad Alqaragholli presents Kiss And Fly, an exhibition featuring silicon bronze sculptures. Ayad was an established and acclaimed artist in the Middle East before coming to Australia as in immigrant with his family several years ago. Ladders, suggestive of the worthwhile but risky work migration entails, are a reoccurring motif throughout his work as figures appear to be climbing up them at dangerous angles where the person could fall but chooses to fly towards a better life.
Exhibition runs ’til Friday, September 24.
Beyond Garment, West Australian Museum – Maritime, Victoria Quary, Fremantle. Beyond Garment is an inspiring and unique exhibition that investigates the boundaries of fashion beyond the ‘frock’ and will be a strong focal point of this year’s Perth Fashion Festival. The exhibition is an investigation of fashion accessories from the commercial to the conceptual; with works presented not just as accessories to dress but as forms of art in their own right. The creations on display will include those of Elizabeth Delfs, Alister Yiap, Antipodium, Maggie Baxter, Eunjeong Jeon, Narlda Searles and Sophie Kyron, with some designers creating pieces exclusively for the exhibition.
Exhibition opens on Friday, September 3, and runs ’til Sunday, November 28.
Perth After Dark, Linton & Kay Contemporary, 123 Hay Street, Subiaco. Documenting our environments of leisure, Perth After Dark sees Colin Madgwick monumentalise familiar streets and buildings of Perth in complex tonal shifts which exemplify his skills. He creates dynamic and multifaceted artworks from his analysis of the pictorial essentials, precisely documenting both buildings and moods to suggest intrigue.
Exhibition opens on Friday, September 3, and runs ’til Friday, September 17.
PERFORMANCE
The Pride, Blue Room Theatre, 53 James Street, Northbridge. Mapping the social patterns of a lion’s life onto human characters dressed as lions (impressively crafted by Esther Sandler), The Pride treads a fine line between comedy and tragedy. Bruce, the figurehead of the family, is renovating the Lyon household kitchen – and he’s chosen a savannah theme. Surrounded by women, Bruce is weighed down by his impressive mane. Struggling to cope with modern living, he knows his time is limited: his stronger and more handsome neighbour James has been peering through the windows admiring the family. Such is the life of a lion.
Season opens on Wednesday, September 1, and runs ’til Saturday, September 18. Bookings can be made through The Blue Room on (08) 9227 7005 or blueroom.org.au.
Jack & Jill, Blue Room Theatre, 53 James Street, Northbridge. When his estranged father dies unexpectedly, rural, small-town Christopher ventures to the unfamiliar inner-city to visit his half-sister Jillian, whom he has never met. Upon meeting Jill the charismatic artist, Christopher is naively enthralled with her colourful world, soon becoming the unwitting prey of her erratic housemates and sometime protégés, Kil and Bear. Jack & Jill reinterprets classic themes of greed, love and power.
Season opens on Wednesday, September 8, and runs ’til Saturday, September 25. Bookings can be made through The Blue Room on (08) 9227 7005 or blueroom.org.au.
The Last Man To Die, Blue Room Theatre, 53 James Street, Northbridge. A blend of drawing, percussion and performance, The Last Man To Die asks you to step into the distant future and look backwards in time to explore the emotional and social consequences of artificial extension of human life - as well as the theories and responses from literature, pop culture and the media. This performance installation invites interaction between the audience, live performers and computer driven audio and visuals, as the theatre is transformed into an abandoned museum from the future that celebrates humankind’s ability to extend their lifespan indefinitely.
Season opens on Wednesday, September 29, and runs ’til Saturday, October 16. Bookings can be made through The Blue Room on (08) 9227 7005 or blueroom.org.au.
MUSIC
Ian Moss, September 3 Charles Hotel; bookings through BOCS
Ross Wilson, September 4 Charles Hotel; bookings through BOCS
Five Elements, September 9 Perth Concert Hall; bookings through BOCS
Too Darn Hot, September 11 Perth Concert Hall; bookings through BOCS
James Reyne, September 18 Charles Hotel; bookings through BOCS
Ash Grunwald, September 19-26 Various venues bookings through BOCS
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