Image: The Churchie National Emerging Art Prize 2013 (installation) 2013. Griffith University Art Museum, Brisbane. Photo: Carl Warner
12 July–7 September 2013
WINNER: Amy Tam (aka Liberté Grace) b.1980, Melbourne, Vic The Perfect Boy Myth (version 1) 2013 HD video, single channel on flatscreen, 16:9, colour, stereo sound, edition 1/5 11:30 mins Courtesy and © the artist undefined
Highly Commended: Annika Koops, Sissy, 2012, digital photograph, inkjet print, edition 2/4 + 1 AP, 132 x 103cm Becc Orszag, Do as we do 2011-12, graphite, carbon pencil on paper; My Other Half 2011-12, graphite, carbon and charcoal on paper; The Sisters 2012, graphite carbon and charcoal on paper.
Exhibiting Finalists included:
- Alun Rhys Jones
- Alice Lang
- Amy Tam
- Annika Koops
- Athena Thebus
- Becc Orszag
- Bianca Lago
- Bobby Kyriakopoulos
- Brett Ramsey
- Caitlin Franzmann + Leena Riethmuller
- Carol McGregor
- Chantal Fraser
- Dana Lawrie
- Dan McCabe
- Elizabeth Willing
- Harley Ives
- Jess Olivieri, Hayley Forward & Parachutes for Ladies
- Jonny Niesche
- Kasia Lynch
- Keg de Souza
- Laura Hindmarsh
- Leo Coyte
- Nadia Mcleish
- Paul Adair
- Phuong Ngo
- Sam Cranstoun
- Sophie Clague
- Sue Beyer
- Svetlana Bailey
- Teo Treloar
- Tully Moore
- Tyza Hart
Pixy Liao
Born 1979 Shanghai, China; lives New York, United States of America
Pixy Liao uses photography, video, and installation to question stereotypical representations of couples, artists, and the female experience. Some of these intimate, humorous photographs are from Liao’s Experimental Relationship project, 2007 – ongoing. For Liao:
As a woman brought up in China, I used to think I could only love someone who is older and more mature than me, who can be my protector and mentor. Then I met my current boyfriend, Moro. Since he is 5 years younger than me, I felt that whole concept of relationships changed, all the way around. I became the person who has more authority & power. One of my male friends even questioned how I could choose a boyfriend the way a man would choose a girlfriend. And I thought, ‘Damn right! That’s exactly what I’m doing, & why not?!
In her photographs, Liao often portrays herself in a dominant role while her boyfriend assumes a more submissive position in order to break the predominant relationship model and experiment with new modes of being together.
Lin Zhipeng (aka No. 223)
Born 1979 Guangdong, China; lives Beijing, China
Lin Zhipeng (aka No.223) is a leading figure in contemporary Chinese photography. Selfnamed after the lovelorn Hong Kong police officer in Wong Kar-wai’s 1994 film Chungking Express, 223’s photographs capture the need to love in an otherwise indifferent society. Documenting the ecstasy, eroticism and esotericism of life amidst an often-closed traditional culture, his photographs act as a collective not-so-private diary of a generation pushing against the limits of the rigid social rules of conservative Chinese society. This presentation is comprised of photographs, dating from 2007 which demonstrate the arcs and parameters of his practice. Confidently flash-lit and playfully posed 223’s photographs show you that relationships will continue even as they change. Your friends will grow old, their homes might shift from Beijing to Paris, and some lovers may depart while others choose to stay. In 223’s photographs we see bodies immersed in milky waters or decisively slumped against the wall. These are bodies that are not explicitly working but neither are they at rest. Embodying the messiness of human relationships, his work is equal parts surprising and sanguine, mundane and melancholic, yet always beautiful.