Monday, January 13, 2020
Compare and Contrast Bodies of Work by Two Artists
2. Compare and contrast bodies of work by two artists you have studied. In your discussion, address the significance of intentions to their practise. The intention of practitioners is pivotal to their practice, these intentions may be different or similar between artists, and two artists whose body of works will be discussed throughout this response include Chris Oââ¬â¢Doherty (b. 1951) a contemporary Australian artist and Lin Onus (b. 1948 d. 1996) a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist.The artworks in which will be compared and contrasted are Chris Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s Aussie Jesus series, including ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesus at the Footballâ⬠(1996) available in poster, calendar and t-shirt form and Lin Onusââ¬â¢ three metre mixed media installation ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990) Although both artists are Australian, Chris Oââ¬â¢Doherty is an Anglo-Saxon Australian and was raised as a Christian and has a commercial background, as a rock musician he conveys his int entions in pop culture with many of his artworks placed on T-shirts, posters and calendars, an example of this is his artwork ââ¬Å"Jesus at the Footballâ⬠, whereas Lin Onus is not influenced by a commercial background, growing up as a man who had experienced the segregation and assimilation of the aboriginal peoples, Lin onusââ¬â¢ artworks are made to illustrate the loss and hope for aboriginal culture and how it has mixed with western culture, this can be seen in his artwork ââ¬Å"Fruit batsâ⬠he is an Indigenous Australian raised in Aboriginal culture. However despite these differences they both identify with Australian contemporary culture. In this way that an artistââ¬â¢s world impacts their body of work.Chris Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s intentions were directly influenced by him being a commercial artist, as when he was in the band ââ¬Å"Mad as Anythingâ⬠he would design their album covers, and other promotional merchandise, this relates to many of his wo rks such as ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesus at the Footballâ⬠which can be bought in the form of a poster, calendar, and shirts, this is a direct reference to Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s use of popular culture in order to spread his art to a wide Audience Oââ¬â¢Doherty also uses his artwork to educate his audience on spiritual aspects in contemporary Australia, while using humour in order to better communicate what he is trying to express, this can be seen in many of his ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesusâ⬠works, specifically ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesus at the footballâ⬠(1996) through the use of the reinterpreted form of ââ¬ËJesusââ¬â¢ if he was Australian, Oââ¬â¢Doherty re-invents The bible story of ââ¬Ë The Miracle of the Loaves and the Fishesââ¬â¢ into a new Australian setting of ââ¬Ëthe Miracle of the pies and beerâ⬠in which allows him to reinterpret the original moral lesson, and to make a contemporary comment about the nature of worship in our culture today, in terms of our worship of food, beer and sports more than things such as family or church. Similarly Lin Onus aims to educate his audience on the Traditional Aboriginal culture, how it has become moulded to western culture and how it affects the Aboriginal peoples.The installation ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990) is a collection in which displays the fruit bats hanging of a Hill Hoist (clothesline) a symbol of western culture, in which is a direct reference to the effect of suburbia on the land and how these indigenous animals have adapted through them hanging of the clothesline and not a tree. However there is also a use of humour in his work, the small disks located on the floor and up the post of the hills hoist are symbols of the batsââ¬â¢ droppings, however display a flower like pattern. In this way Onus wishes to reflect on his culture in terms of the progression of the intertwining of Aboriginal and Western cultures.Lin Onus also uses the medium of an installation in the artwork â⬠Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990) which enables the audience to participate with the work and therefore is available for a wider audience much like Oââ¬â¢Doherty. The artworks Differ in their medium, Lin Onusââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990) is an installation piece made up of mixed media, whereas many of Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s works such as ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesus at the Footballâ⬠are purchasable items in the form of posters, Calenders, shirts and much more, these are however linked to their common ability to communicate to a larger audience as Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s work can be bought by many and Onusââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠can involve a large audience.Another contrasting aspect of these works is the religion imbued in the work where as ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesusâ⬠implies the artworks Christian nature Chis Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s work is subtly Indigenous through the use of Traditional aboriginal symbols and techniques seen in ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990), this then leads to the differences in the artistic style of the bodies of work, Oââ¬â¢Doherty uses a comic like style in his illustrations of the bible in contemporary terms, while Onus mixes Western and Traditional Aboriginal art styles such as the Arnhem land crosshatching seen on the wings of the fruit bats in the artwork ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990), in this way both collections of work communicate culture and spirituality. The artworks also contrast in their subject matters while Chris Oââ¬â¢Doherty deals with the ideas of worship and contemporary Australian culture in his ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesusâ⬠specifically ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesus at the Footballâ⬠(1996), Lin Onus focuses on the mixing of Western culture and Indigenous Australian culture and its effect on Aboriginal Australians. Finally Both artworks deal with Humour in their works while still pertaining to communicate a more serious message. Oââ¬â¢Doherty uses humour in that he re-contextualises the bible sto ries into more comedic modern terms while making a point on Australian contemporary culture and worship.Lin Onus also uses humour in his work ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠through the disks with flower patterns scattered over and around the Hills Hoist actually representing the bat droppings, however still communicating the more serious notion of the adaption of the Aboriginal people to western culture. It is evident that Both Lin Onus and Chris Oââ¬â¢Doherty address the significance of intention to their practise. This has been demonstrated by comparing their bodies of work, including Chis Oââ¬â¢Dohertyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Aussie Jesusâ⬠series and Lin Onusââ¬â¢ installation piece ââ¬Å"Fruit Batsâ⬠(1990). While these artists are completely different in their artistic styles, subject matter and mediums they share a common interest in their intentions of their art practise, showing their view on Australian culture and heritage, while imbuing their works with spirituality , humour and making it more accessible to a wide audience.
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