Showing posts with label dodd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dodd. Show all posts

November 23, 2011

THE REST IS SILENCE - DEATH BE KIND

This work, Undead Drover, completed last year as part of a residency at Fremantle Art Centre, has been selected to be part of an exhibition examining the use of skulls as a motif at Death Be Kind, 134 Lygon St, East Brunswick, Melbourne. The work is 91 x 101cm.
On show until December 11.
More details here - http://www.deathbekind.com/

October 22, 2011

TOP END TOUR 2011

During October and November of 2011 I will be travelling throughout Australia's Northern Territory doing a few workshops with community centres and schools. I will be working with Angurugu School on Groote Eylandt, Yirrkala Art Centre in East Arnhem Land and Barkly Arts Centre in Tennant Creek.

Here are a few shots of hanging out with the students at Angurugu, sharing some stencil skills and gearing them up to paint a mural in their school.

You can see a couple more pics on the Angurugu School blog by clicking here..




September 19, 2011

August 24, 2011

JAMES DODD – SEPTEMBER NEWS 2011

I will be sharing some artwork soon via a couple of exhibitions. Some of the work is old, some of it recent and some of it hot off the press! If you’re in Melbourne or Adelaide you can see some work in the flesh…

SPACE INVADERS
RMIT Gallery, Melbourne
Opens Thu 1st of September, until 5th of November
Curated by the National Gallery of Australia, Space Invaders presents a collection of examples of early stencils, stickers and zines representative of the developing stages of Australia’s fine street art culture. Having been presented in Canberra and Brisbane, the exhibition continues its tour in Melbourne.

SPACE INVADERS @ RMIT LINK

PACIFIC RIFF
Lindberg Contemporary, Melbourne
Opens Fri 2nd of September, until 1st of October
This solo exhibition is my second with Lindberg Contemporary. The work that I have produced represents a return to stencil driven outcomes. Encompassing experiments that link the work to ongoing investigations, the show consists of a number of installed and painted works executed over the last 6 months. Shots will be online here after the show has opened.

LINDBERG GALLERY LINK




HUGO MICHELL GROUP SHOW
Hugo Michell Gallery, Adelaide
Opens Thu 15th of September, until 20th October
I will be presenting a suite of works completed last year during my residency at Fremantle Art Centre. I am quite excited to give the works their first showing outside of W.A. Paul Sloan and Matthys Gerber will also be exhibiting in this show.

HUGO MICHELL GALLERY LINK

HUGO MICHELL GROUP SHOW INSTALL SHOTS



May 10, 2011

MAY LANE TOURING SHOW @ SAMSTAG MUSEUM ADELAIDE

The Mays Project is busy touring Australia.
It's Adelaide leg will be from May 13 til July 1 at the Samstag Art Museum, North Tce.

Links to a couple of vids below..

Now..




And the beginning...

April 30, 2011

THE SIRENS CALL - SECRET SHOW

Here's a few shots of the work that I presented in a warehouse space in Brisbane's West End during May...






THE SIRENS CALL - RYAN RENSHAW GALLERY BRISBANE

I have an exhibition of new work opening Saturday May 7th at Ryan Renshaw Gallery. Here's the spin -

This new body of work is an investigation into the changing nature of Australian patriotism and it's representation. The last decade of Australian politics has seen a number of coming of age moments for our nation, none less visible than the seduction of nationalism. The central motif to all of this is the ever more ubiquitous southern cross and its variants. Flags, apparel, cars and even bodies are emblazoned with this sign of allegiance.
Returning to the economy of stencilled aerosol and drawing, Dodd has created a suite of works that may be at once celebratory and critical. These images are equally at home on the gallery wall as the grimy surfaces of suburbia.










ADELAIDE CITY COUNCIL MURAL COMMISSION

Officially the largest thing I have tried to paint.
The Adelaide City Council has recently commissioned a number of murals around the CBD.
This new push from the Council is sure to change the nature of street in Adelaide.

Here are a few quick snaps.





April 29, 2011

SOFT REBELLION - SASA GALLERY - VIDEO

As produced by Sam Roberts, a little overview of the group show at SASA Gallery early in 2011.

March 20, 2011

TRAM

My mate Simon and I were invited by a beer company to make an ad for them.
It's been printed really big and slapped on a tram that's running in Melbourne and a bus in Sydney. We had fun - it was a great opportunity to experiment with something of this scale. Here's a little trailer...

#86 from James on Vimeo.

KING ADZ - STREET KNOWLEDGE

My pommie mate King Adz has been up to his usual business.
His latest publication is a bible of all things street culture from across the globe.
It features a number of Australian artists, myself included.





You can buy it here...

THE NEW NEW - VIDEO INTERVIEW

Here's a little vid of yours truly waxing lyrical about my picnic tables.
The Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia has interviews with almost all of the artists involved with the New New project on their YouTube page.

October 27, 2010

PICNIC TABLES - THE NEW NEW

Opening late in October of 2010, the Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia is staging possibly one of the most significant overviews of contemporary SA artists ever to be undertaken. Including 47 artists, numerous sites across Adelaide and a hefty publication this is a project that has been a long time coming.

My contribution to the project is a series of picnic tables that have been altered and placed in both Victoria and Whitmore Squares. They have images of significant Australian paintings from the Art Gallery of South Australia's collection carved into their tops, which double as printing plates. For me, this project is an exploration of the values placed on cultural residues such as graffiti. I find the scratchings on various public furniture to be as engaging as some of the greatest paintings that are in major institutions. I have adapted images from Roberts, Gould and Boyd, each of which portray particular notions of Australian colonialism and social identity that can still be reflected upon today.

One of the tables is to be carved on site, allowing the opportunity to interact with the general public and extend the project via discussion. Viewers are invited to add their initials or names to the surfaces of the tables.

Here are a few pics taken during the development of the work.

















BOAB INSCRIPTIONS - PART TWO

Here are a few more shots of my show at the Fremantle Arts Centre.




October 2, 2009

JAMES DODD – OCTOBER NEWS

I have just returned from 2 months travel to Europe and the United States and have returned inspired and enthused! If you want to see some recent work there are a couple of group shows coming up that I will have pieces in.


THE DEVIL, MAX DAWN GALLERY, SA
Come along to what will be a very entertaining selection of works by a great list of artists at Adelaide’s most exciting new independent gallery. Opens 7pm, Saturday the 10th of October, 47 Phillips St, Thebarton.




Max Dawn Farcebook Propaganda available here


WHYALLA ART PRIZE, SA
I have had a work selected for the finalist exhibition of Country Arts SA’s Whyalla Art Prize. Opens 6pm Friday the 16th of October, Middleback Theatre, Whyalla. Runs until the 13th of November.

More details and a full list of artists can be seen here


TERRITORY, CROSS CULTURAL ART EXCHANGE, NT
Thom Buchanan, Will Nolan, Elizabeth Wojciak and myself will be presenting work in a group exhibition at one of Darwin’s finest commercial galleries, Cross Cultural Art Exchange.
The show opens 6pm, Friday the 6th of November, 2/2 Harriet Place, Darwin.

More information about CCAE

This project is part of an exchange between South Australian and Northern Territory artists. Top Enders Nina Battley, Rob Brown and Bryan Bulley will be presenting work in Adelaide at Gallery 139. The exhibition opens 6pm Thursday the 29th of October, 139 Magill Rd, Stepney.

To view Gallery 139 artists go here


HUCK MAGAZINE, EUROPE
My Pommy mate King Adz has been kind enough to run a rather complementary article on my work in Huck Magazine, a bi-monthly lifestyle magazine. In print, on your local European newsstand, pick it up in Spanish, German or plain old English.

//Name’s Jimmy//

//Australia’s James Dodd is taking outsider graffiti to a higher brow.//

Jimmy and I met by chance when we were both guest speakers at some insane Belgium street art fest, where there were more artists than punters. It was a strange but interesting weekend and it was one of those meetings where it feels like you’ve known the person forever, which is what friendship is all about: eternity. The only downside to the weekend was the inedible vegan shit masquerading as food. Anyhow… me and Jim hit it off and he very kindly let me into his world. The life of an original artist is one of the most interesting places for a writer.

Now 31, Jimmy used to be one of the most prominent stencil artists in Australia until he gave it all up to go back to uni and study for his Masters of Visual Art. This was an astute move as now his work has all the influences of the street but with the heavy-weight conceptual backing of the art establishment.

What Jimmy does is travel the world collecting scrawls and graffiti (not the street art kind, but the underclass style). He shoots them on a digital camera, and then comes up with a concept – like the time he built a facsimile of a Darwin bus shelter (renowned for being painted with very kitsch sunsets) and used exact copies of the collected scrawls to cover its surfaces. Thus underclass outsider art became high art. I fucking love it.

“I’ve always been attracted to graffiti and to people who do things that they’re not supposed to,” says Jim, from his Adelaide home (‘Adelaide has a slower pace than Melbourne which I prefer at the moment because it means I can get more work done.’)

. “There was even a period when I thought that street art could solve all of the world’s problems - fortunately that’s passed…”

Having spent years knee-deep in the Melbourne stencil scene, Jim knows better than most what he likes and, more importantly, what he don’t: “I’ve decided that most New York/train oriented graf is very derivative,” he says. “As a culture, it often doesn’t support innovation and experimentation. But these are the primary things that I find exciting in all creative endeavours. That’s why I find outsider graffiti so exciting, because it doesn’t adhere to a set of rules and is often unpredictable.”

Right now, Jimmy’s…( So, at the moment, He is developing artwork that uses found scrawl as a component, and is mostly interested in making work that is heavily influenced by street creativity and intervention to be shown in galleries, in the context of informed art discussions. James is also spending some time working on community projects, like teaching Year 8 and 9 classes from Mitcham Girls High in Adelaide stencil techniques and producing material to contribute to a large mural on the outside of the school.

– but in between it all, he’s still looking for those outsider kids who love scrawling on the street: “I look at the streets wherever I go, they remain a constant source of inspiration for me. At the moment, non-disciplined graffiti is the type of stuff that turns me on the most. I want to celebrate this in the art that I am making.”




Check out Adz’s latest Huck online column entry here