Art Gallery Casino Nsw

  

The Art Gallery of NSW will restore and revitalize a series of spaces in its existing historic buildings as part of the $344 million Sydney Modern project. The gallery has appointed Tonkin Zulaikha Greer to undertake the works, which will restore space in the original 19 th century building as well as the 20 th century additions.

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The Art Gallery of New South Wales' fascinating presentation of acclaimed multi-media artist Nam June Paik coincides with a major installation of the artist's work on the forecourt of the Sydney Opera House as part of Sydney Festival 2003.

Art Gallery Casino Nsw

Born in South Korea in 1932, and now living in New York, Paik is regarded as a visionary pioneer in performance, video art and multimedia presentation. Paik's life in art grew out of politics and anti-art movements of the 1950s, 60s and 70s. His art reflects long held beliefs in a united global society, where past and present are in constant dialogue and where there is no division between art and technology.

Presented in the new Asian galleries, one of the main focuses of the exhibition is Paik’s now legendary visit to Australia in 1976.

'This visit by Paik in 1976, was for many their first introduction to performance and video art, it was quite revolutionary,' said Jackie Menzies, Head Curator of Asian Art.

During this 1976 visit, accompanied by cellist and artistic collaborator Charlotte Moorman, Paik presented a series of artworks in Sydney and Adelaide. These acclaimed avant-garde events included Cello Sonata in which Moorman played her cello suspended from the outside roof of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Also at the Art Gallery was a series of performances with Moorman playing Paik's compositions including TV Bra for Living Sculpture and the now celebrated Concerto for TV Cello and Video Tapes. The exhibition traces these performances through video and photography.

The exhibition comprises a selection of electronic and sculptural work by Paik held in private Australian collections including the actual TV Cello played by Moorman, the Art Gallery of New South Wales' new acquisition Buddha Game, as well as a re-installation of Paik's spectacular TV Garden.
This exhibition perfectly complements Sydney Festival’s presentation of Paik's major installation on the forecourt of the Sydney Opera House, a selection of 16 cars from 32 Cars for the 20th Century play Mozart's Requiem Quietly along with Transmission, a neon and laser tower made in collaboration with New Yorker Norman Ballard.

Location: Art Gallery Road, The Domain, Sydney
The Art Gallery NSW is surrounded by parklands on the eastern edge of the CBD. There are around 29,000 items in the permanent collection and it is divided up into seven major collections. The Australian collection reflects the evolving cultural traditions of the past two hundred years of European settlement in Australia. The Yiribana Gallery is dedicated to the permanent display of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art.
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History of The Building

When it was constructed, what is today the Art Gallery's main building in the Domain was known as The National Gallery. It was designed by Government Architect Walter Liberty Vernon, who was assigned the task by the Government instead of the preferred choice of the Trustees of the Art Gallery, private architect John Horbury Hunt, who has designed a temporary brick building erected in 1884. Vernon followed the Trustees' brief for a Classic Greek-temple style building, complete with portico and columns, not unlike William Playfair's fine gallery in Edinburgh, however the building's present form is a little more austere and undecorated than Vernon had originally intended and is only part of the complex envisaged by him.
The main building we see today, which was to be the first wing of a much larger Gallery, was built in 5 stages. In 1902, midway through construction, Vernon gave an eight page presentation album to the Trustees which illustrated his proposed designs for the completed Gallery complex. He proposed that his oval lobby which had just been opened would lead into an equally imposing Central Court. His plans, which included a northern gallery intended to correspond with the southern watercolour gallery, were rejected. Consequently, until 1969 his lobby lead, by a short descent from the entrance level, to the existing three northern galleries housed in Hunt's temporary building.
After 1909 nothing more was built of Vernon's designs and his ground plan remained incomplete. In the 1930s the NSW Government decided to complete it but the Depression and other financial constraints lead to the plan's abandonment. In 1968 the Government approved the addition of a new Gallery as a major part of the Captain Cook Bicentenary celebrations. Andrew Anderson was the Architect entrusted with the design of the new building, which opened to the public in November 1970.
The Missing Twelve Artists' Names

The decor of the Vernon's building included the names of famous artists set high around its front and sides below the entablature. Forty-four names were intended. Thirty-two names are found on the existing elevations, lettered in bronze below the entablature. Seven intended names are known from architectural drawings, the other five intended names were is not known.
Painters appear on the southern half of the front elevation, and on the adjoining side elevation to the south: Giotto, Raphael, Titian, Rembrandt, Murillo, Rubens, Andrea del Sarto, Botticelli, Bellini, Cimabue, Correggio, Leonardo da Vinci, Tintoretto, Velasquez, Vandyck and Gainsborough. Sculptors appear on the northern half of the front, and were presumably intended for the adjoining side elevation to the north: Michael Angelo (see explanation below), Donatello, Ghiberti, Pheidias, Cellini, Canova, Jean Goujon, Pythagoras, Praxiteles and Anthemius. Architects appear on the rear ??elevation: Christopher Wren, Philibert de l'Orme, Perrault, Juan de Herrera, Mansart and Inigo Jones.
The names intended for the unbuilt part of the rear elevation are included on drawings from 1895 for the front, south and rear elevations. These drawings correspond with the names as installed, except that those on the side elevation are placed in a different order (Leonardo da Vinci, Correggio, Tintoretto, Bellini, Botticelli, Cimabue, Velasquez, Vandyck and Gainsborough). A drawing for the elevation of the small portion of the Art Gallery built in 1896, shows six names: Ictinus, Phidias, Raphael, M. Angelo, Titian and C. Wren. Five of these names appear on the elevations that were completed; one, Ictinus, must have been intended for the unbuilt north elevation. The names intended for the rear elevation towards the north, which was ne??ver built, were Sansovino, Bramante, Palladio, Vignola, Vitruvius and Brunellescho. It has been suggested over the years that the names of the artists now in place should be removed, as they bear no relation to the collections housed within. They will remain as they are, for the time being at least, as they are seen as a continual, albeit quaint, reminder of the gallery's founders, their vision and aspirations.
Many visitors to the Gallery ask, 'Why is Michelangelo's name written as 'Michael Angelo' and why has the Gallery never corrected this? Today it is the standard practice in the English speaking world to refer to the great Italian sculptor, painter and architect Michelagnolo Lodovico di Lionardo Buonarroti Simoni [1475-1564], by the name by which he was known to his Italian contemporaries 'Michelangelo'. Sir Charles Eastlake, in his influen??0003]tial two volumed Handbook of Painting: the Italian Schools [1837], spelt the name as 'Michael Angelo'. John Ruskin, who is accepted as the greatest art critic of the 19th century, also preferred this spelling of the name, so the Trustees followed these authorities and the name as written is not a mistake as is often suggested.
The Missing Bas-Relief Panels

At the request of the Trustees of the Art Gallery, Vernon included twelve panels below the artists' names which the Trustees intended to use to depict the various eras of art. The first to be erected were to be a series of six panels depicting the six 'distinctive historical art periods' of the Assyrian, Egyptian, Grecian, Roman, Gothic and Renaissance. Presumably the remaining six would be filled later and have a similar theme. Bronze was chosen as the medium, as it was decided that marble ??0003]caught too sharply the glare of sunlight. The Trustees organised a competition for the first two panels which were to depict subjects typical of Assyrian and Egyptian Art. The general treatment of the designs should harmonize with a panel already fixed, Phyrne before Praxiteles by the English sculptor Percival Ball, and with the architecture of the building. Only four of the twelve panels were ever filled. They are set high on the south half of the front elevation, and beside them are the two empty panels intended to depict Gothic and Renaissance.
All of the six panels on the corresponding north half of the front elevation also remain empty. At first sight the four completed reliefs appear to relate to the bronze names of artists on the entablature, but there is no relation between the artists' names and the reliefs. Mounted to the right from the Ga??llery entrance, their subjects are from (left to right) Assyria, Egypt, Greece and Rome. They depict:Assur-Natsir-Pal, King of Assyria by the English sculptor Gilbert Bayes [1872-1953]. Bayes was awarded 50 pounds for this work. The panel was cast in England and placed in position in February 1907. It depicts the visit of Sennacherib, King of Assyria, and his Queen to view the progress of the building of his palace at Koyounjik [or Kongjunjk]. Queen Hatasu of Egypt by the English sculptor Countess Feodora Gleichen [1861-1922].
Gleichen was awarded 50 pounds for this work. The panel was cast in England and placed in position in March 1908. It depicts Queen Hatasu giving directions for the construction of her famous avenue of Ram-headed Sphinxes. The bas-relief shows the Queen in the act of examining a plan unfolded before her by the architect kneeling at her f??eet. Thothmes visiting the Temple of Denderah by James White, a Sydney sculptor, who was awarded a second prize of 25 pounds.Phyrne before Praxiteles by the English sculptor Percival Ball [1844-1900]. Ball lived in Australia from 1886 - 1899. This panel was designed and modelled in Sydney in 1899 and cast in England. Erected on 27 March 1903. it was the first to be placed in position. The fourth panel, Augustus at Nimes, by the English sculptor William Reid Dick [1879-1961] was not an entry in the competition but rather it was a gift to the Gallery by the Gallery Trustee and Sydney architect Sir John Sulman. It was placed in position in December 1931.