Showing posts with label mid-century modern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mid-century modern. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Happy Birthday Scott Redford!


There is not an artist in the world who knows more about Australia's
 Gold Coast than my friend of many years Scott Redford.  


Born in Broadbeach in 1962, Redford has since 1983, continued a prolific art practice which whilst coming from an art historical standpoint
 has encapsulated everything from local and international
 pop culture imagery, minimalism, queer art, conceptualism,
 documentation of local mid-century architecture, 
surf culture, and a vigorous fascination with
 memory, desire, nostalgia and place.

Catalogue cover Scott Redford Selected Works 1983-1992

The place being Australia's coastal tourism capital the Gold Coast
 Our version of Miami Florida, Santa Monica or Venice California,
 Palm Springs, Las Vegas or indeed Florida's own Gold Coast,
 or a mash up of all of the above. 
The Gold Coast being in Redford's words, 
'the most post modern and fastest growing city in Australia', 
has continued to be the backdrop to which
Redford has based almost 30 years of art practice.

Paradise Waters early 1970's


Mid-century beach bungalow, Broadbeach

Typically perceived as the cultural backwater with its co-existence of kitschy glitzy night life, tourist playground, beach culture, and property development, Redford has hailed the city

 'A work of art in itself!'

Surf Painting/Modernist House 2000 
decal, polyester resin, fibreglass and acrylic lacquer on foam


Surf Painting /House corner of Surf Parade and First Avenue, Broadbeach, Gold Coast 2001 (detail)
decal, resin fibreglass and acrylic on foam


Surf Painting/Black Palms 2000
 decal, resin fibreglass & synthetic polymer on foam

 He optimistically embraces his hometown and in typical Warholian fashion continues to be interested in the idea that pop culture is just as important as what is deemed to be 'high art' and that the lines are now permanently blurred!

Redford forever interested in the concept of 'otherness' 
has continued to ask the question:
  'Does locality fail?'

Why is anything which comes from outside the cultural epicentres of the world whether that be New York or Melbourne, regarded as less important?

And in fact similar comparisons can be made regarding the status of 
New York versus Los Angeles artists. Indeed California is currently celebrating its own history of
mass culture in many exhibitions such as the current
'California Art and Design - Living in a Modern Way' at LACMA .

Glazed Ceramic Skull for use in the proposed film Reinhardt Dammn 2008


During the 1980's, 1990's and 2000's  Redford has produced an impressive array of art comprising painting, sculpture, installation, video, photography, and the ever popular surfboard paintings. 


Here We Are Now/Entertain Us 1999 custom made surfboard cross

He is one of the few Australian artists who has embraced the process of collaboration with countless craftsmen and technicians, to produce his art.  Something, 'internationally' so commonplace a'la Warhol and Koons.

Sculpture to Lean Against and Discuss Pictures  2004

Now the work which is emerging in the younger generation of artists
 both nationally and internationally, 
is so reminiscent of much of Redford's back catalogue


Floor piece detail 1962 2003


Detail from floor piece from exhibition 1962 2003


After Robert Rauschenberg enamel over paper on canvas 1991


 And in fact his construction of a fictional young artist Reinhardt Dammn, the cute surfie who makes art, serves to illustrate the point in Redford's more recent work showcased at the
 'Scott Redford introducing Reinhardt Dammn' in 2011.




Reinhardt Dammn Introducing Scott Redford QAG 2011

QAG gallery view Scott Redford introducing Reinhardt Dammn 2011

Polar bear in the Water Mall QAG 2011

Proposal for a Gold Coast public Sculpture to commemorate Nirvana
coming to the Gold Coast/Surf & Kurt 2008



The High/Perpetual Christmas No Abstractions 2008 outside GOMA Brisbane


A Proposal for a Gold Coast Sculpture/ A Place In the Sun 2005


Now, with the cultural entrenchment of what used to be called
 'the information super highway' and all that goes with the world of
 social network and instant gratification, where everyone can be famous for way more than 15 minutes, I think that
locality does not and should not fail.

Automatic For The People/Surf 1997 epoxy coated custom wood


Scott Redford gets a birthday wish from me. 
 To my friend of almost 40 years and to someone who always inspires me.....

 Happy birthday!

The Gold Coast now belongs to the global village

Surfers Paradise has just 'entered the building!'


'Our goal must be nothing less than the establishment
 of Surfers Paradise on earth!'


Scott Redford is currently working in Berlin.


Words J Watson-Evans

Images via

 '1962 Scott Redford Selected Works 1983-1992; Scott Redford and the Gold Coast 'The Content of these paintings is secret, known only to the people of Surfers Paradise Gold Coast City Art Gallery; Scott Redford Introducing Reinhardt Dammn QAG/GOMA 2011; J Watson-Evans; Brisbane Times.com.au


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Come to Papa!


In 1951 Hans J. Wegner prolific furniture design icon of the 20th Century
designed Model 19 otherwise known as

 the Papa Bear chair











A bear coming to hug you from behind...it's paws reaching out to envelope you in superior comfort....


One of these awesome beauties depending on whether it be an original or reissue,
 could set you back between $12 - $25K!  What an incredible investment piece!

Probably the ultimate in mid-century aesthetic.



Monday, August 8, 2011

Tati's Modernist Perfection

Do you ever feel like Madame Arpel from
Jacques Tati's 1958 classic Mon Oncle?

Anyone for a saucer chair?




The good wife bidding farewell to her husband
 from their perfect modernist box and their perfect modernist garden!
 



The Fish Sculpture Fountain must always be switched on for special visitors!

Built for ultimate 'comfort'...one must always impress important guests!

Absolute perfection?  Now where do I get my hands on the coloured pebble?

Staircase ... sublime!


I saw this film a number of years ago and was touched not only by Tati's comic genius and wonderful design aesthetic, but also his critique on modern life.

This hysterically charming film illustrates the pitfalls of postwar modernism, the obsession with consumerism, and the constant desire to achieve the ultimate aesthetic.


Oh dear!  Not much has changed and I find myself strangely identifying with this......


words J Watson-Evans
The Decorator

via Youtube, Interior Design.com

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Palm Springs On My Mind

Bougain Villa designed by William Burgess & Albert Frey


 Kaufmann House designed by Richard Neutra 



There is something so comfortingly familiar to me about
Palm Springs.

I feel as though the idea of Palm Springs is indelibly stamped into my memory, and I keep wanting to return although I have never been.

Is it because I am a child of the 1960's?


  Is it because my parents were in showbiz during the 1950's and '60's and the memories of their little showbiz world
 in Sydney Australia
and their love and admiration of all things American
 somehow echoed
 the glamorous heyday of
Palm Springs that they only heard about?


Kaufmann House by Richard Neutra

Is it a reminder of my childhood homes? 
 Our Australian version of the 'Californian Bungalow' 
which later morphed into a two storey 
Mansard/Cape Cod hybrid around 1972
 Or the 1960's sun room with its cane saucer chairs,
 the faux bamboo screens sliding across 
the Neutra style glass windows
 with their crisp white wooden frames 
looking out to my mother's succulent pebble garden?


Loewy Residence by Albert Frey

Is it the memory of the reel to reel tape which recorded not only my parents singing songs of 
Sinatra and Martin
but me at the age of six belting out
  Barbra Streisand's "My Man"
from the 'Funny Girl' soundtrack.

Is it the memories of the Rat Pack,
  Shirley Maclaine and Sammy Davis in "Sweet Charity"?
Or watching Laugh In and the Carol Burnett Show?

Miller Fong Lotus chairs 1968

Or growing up on Australia's Gold Coast during the 1970's
where our very own waterfront suburbs such as
  Miami, Palm Beach, Coral Gables, Florida Gardens and Rio Vista
were developed and flourished.


Poolside at the Kaufmann House Photo by Slim Aarons circa 1970

I have had a love for all things mid-century modern
ever since I was lucky enough to acquire my
 Grant Featherston armchairs from an upholsterer friend
 back in the 1980's 
who passed them off as his own wacky designs
 reupholstered in 
"1980's doing 1950's"
 printed lime green and orange fabric.




This was way before we were even talking about Australia's
 own mid-century designers,
 and I had not even heard of Grant Featherston


 I was only then learning about Mies and Eames!


Del Marcos Hotel designed by Albert Frey

Bougain Villa by Burgess & Frey

For whatever reason, Palm Springs and the mid-century style 
has somehow been transposed into my psyche from a young age.

Neutra's Desert House gardens at the Kaufmann Residence

Palm Springs Condominium

Palm Springs style and mid-century modernism
 will always evoke a feeling of "going home" for me.


  That feeling of familiarity, leisure time, perceived comfort,
 hope and innocence of times past. 
 And the excitement and glamour of modernism! 


 The memories and the legacy that these times encapsulate,
 will always energise and inspire me.

Viceroy Hotel


William F. Cody home designed for Bill Butler



words  J. Watson-Evans
 The Decorator


all images via 'Palm Springs Style' by Aline Coquelle 2005


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