Universe - Luise Fong
3 September - 10 October, 1999
"My starting points are generally intuitive responses to the world, to my state of
mind, and to cultural aspects around me. I'm interested in basic, simple processes and
finding poetry in simple things."
Comprising of a selection of paintings created during Luise Fong's residency as the
Visiting Artist at the University of Canterbury, this exhibition at the McDougall
Contemporary Art Annex combines themes explored within Fong's earlier work with new
concerns for image and space. While Fong's paintings have often been likened to
cosmological galaxies, the title she has chosen for this exhibition is instead intended to
reflect the intimate sphere of her own life and artwork.
Born in Sandaken, Malaysia in 1964, Fong moved to New Zealand as a child. She graduated
with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in print-making from the University of Auckland in
1989. In 1994 Fong was the artist-in-residence at the Victorian College of the Arts in
Melbourne and in the same year was the joint winner (with Bill Hammond) of the Visa Gold
Art Award. Fong has been included in several important international exhibitions,
including Cultural Safety: Contemporary Art from New Zealand, Frankfurter Kunstverein,
1995 and Trans/fusion: Hong Kong artists' exchange, Hong Kong Arts Centre and Auckland Art
Gallery, 1996. She has lived and worked in Melbourne since 1995.
Fong's paintings of the mid-1990s were evocative, multi-layered, abstract works which
unveiled a rich range of associations. By marking, or 'wounding', the canvas and by using
a minimal, restricted palette, Fong alluded to the body's forms, surfaces and tensions.
She subtly intervened with the surfaces in a variety of ways by scratching, smearing,
splashing and even drilling holes into the works to allude to traces of nature and ghostly
reflections of the body. Many of these paintings sought to challenge initial perceptions
with what appeared to be holes, actually revealing, on closer inspection, small soft pads
made of black velvet. The memory of a near drowning experience during childhood has
remained with Fong and still informs her painting 25 years later. The "blissful
feeling", and "suspension of time and space" Fong associates with this
experience is also generated by her physical experience of painting. It is therefore not
surprising that water is an intrinsic part of her working process.
Fong's works have also developed connections between cosmology, pathology and the
interior spaces of the human body. The 'violation' of the surface echoes the invasion of
the body during autopsy and the seemingly molecular forms evoke connections with cellular
biopsies, exploratory surgery and disease. Fong's works cast aspersions on the vigour and
mortality of the human race and in many ways symbolise the female psyche; the silent
spaces within abstract painting emulating the silencing of women within the patriarchal
western culture.
Further exploring the connections, in an open-ended and ambiguous way, between painting
and the body, her works revealed a desire to connect the mind with the body, the corporeal
and the intuitive, as well as an exploration of the binary oppositions of light/dark,
night/day, intuition/intellect, interior/exterior, microcosmic/macroscopic and
translucence/ solidity. Fong's pleasure in aesthetics, the sense of the handcrafted in her
practice and the tangible, multi-layered surfaces allude to the complex relationship
between the creative, 'artistic' process and practical, manual application/intervention.
Since 1995, Fong's paintings have become more image-based, coinciding with a heavier
application of paint and a strong emphasis on surface and the universal language of
painting. She has recently begun to construct images with a strong physical presence,
consciously responding to their occupation of (and interaction with) space. Instead of
concerning herself with the residue of paint and transparent layers, she is now interested
in building up the surface to create strong lines in a more pre-meditated fashion.
According to Fong: 'The physicality of making art is very important to me. In fact, I
think it is increasingly important, as we head towards a new century and a time when
things are increasingly 'unreal', that art and handcrafted objects have a feel of the body
on them". Vital to this process is the expansion of her materials and exploring new
ways of working.
The paintings Fong will create for Universe are part of her continued interest in space
and the physical sciences, often revealed in the past through titles such as Vulgar Planet
and Small Orbit. Her most recent paintings have, through both the process of their
construction and their final appearance, explored the natural forces which subtly control
life on earth. Works such as Plunge, Sink and System not only consider the constant and
unalterable push and pull of gravity in their eerie, distorted surfaces, but were created
when Fong deliberately used physical forces in her painting process, tipping, tilting and
dripping onto the painted surface to create patterns and effects in a controlled and
premeditated fashion. The resultant mark-making is not expressionist, but rather
represents an intuitive, if calculated, response to the basic and omnipresent forces of
nature.
The University of Canterbury's Visiting Artist programme, supported by Creative New
Zealand, has provided a welcome opportunity for Fong to return to New Zealand. Believing
that a strong sense of place is integral to her art practice, Fong maintains that she
always makes her best work whilst living in New Zealand and expects that the new paintings
she will make here will reveal the subtle influence of her surroundings.
Felicity Milburn
This exhibition was held at the Robert McDougall Contemporary Art Annex in the Arts Centre.
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