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New collection exhibition Big Ceramic Energy to open at Shepparton Art Museum in August 2024

Shepparton Art Museum (SAM) is thrilled to present Big Ceramic Energy, a new SAM Collection exhibition featuring a selection of Australian, First Nations, and international contemporary artists whose creative practices push the boundaries of the ceramic medium through experimentation, innovation, and imagination.

The artworks featured in this exhibition are drawn from the museum's dynamic collection, which has expanded and developed through donations, bequests, select acquisitions and curatorial commissions, as well as special acquisitions from past editions of the museum’s Sidney Myer Ceramic Award and Indigenous Ceramic Award.

Recent acquisitions from artists Isadora Vaughan and Karen Black will make their SAM debut, whilst beloved works from Deborah Halpern, Kaye Poulton and Bankstown Koori Elders will emerge after years in storage. Through eccentric forms to experimental glazes, the grouping of highly individual artworks in Big Ceramic Energy exude a shared boldness of character, with each work expressing the artists’ unique techniques and approaches to the medium.

Danny Lacy, SAM Acting Artistic Director, says of the exhibition:

Big Ceramic Energy is a show dedicated to celebrating artists in the SAM Collection who challenge audience preconceptions of what ceramics can or should be, investigating complex stories and histories that find new depth through their use of material and technique. SAM has a rich legacy of supporting artists as they innovate in the field of ceramics and has built up an impressive holding of artworks that reveal the journey that the ceramic medium has taken through the experimentations of these artists. Longtime visitors to SAM will be glad to see the return of some familiar artworks from the collection in Big Ceramic Energy, whilst discovering artworks that we hope go on to become new favourites.”

Big Ceramic Energy opens at SAM on Saturday 3 August 2024 with free entry.

ENDS

Full list of exhibiting artists:

Bankstown Koori Elders Group, Karen Black, Stephen Bowers, Penny Byrne, Greg Daly, Lynda Draper, Deborah Halpern, Steve Hilton, Jenny Orchard, Kaye Poulton, Isadora Vaughan, Graeme Wilkie.

About SAM:

Shepparton Art Museum (SAM) is located on Yorta Yorta Country, Shepparton, Victoria.

As a leading Australian regional art museum, SAM showcases its exhibitions and collections in new and exciting ways, creating a welcoming, inclusive, and engaging space for all visitors.

Recognised for its significant Australian ceramics collection and nationally significant collection of Indigenous art, SAM’s programming is designed to be locally relevant and engages with global contemporary ideas. Through its exhibitions, collection, programs and events, SAM creates a place where art helps us to better understand the ancient cultures of this country and contemporary multicultural Australia.

Image: Jenny Orchard, Durian Head and Choko Nose (c. 2007), Shepparton Art Museum Collection, acquired as the winner of the 2017 Sidney Myer Fund Australian Ceramic Award, 2017 © Jenny Orchard. Photo: Christian Capurro.

Shepparton Art Museum’s major international exhibition Ryan McGinley: YEARBOOK to close 14 July 2024

Shepparton Art Museum’s major international exhibition Ryan McGinley: YEARBOOK to close 14 July 2024

After more than four successful months of display, Shepparton Art Museum’s (SAM) major exhibition YEARBOOK from American photographer Ryan McGinley will draw to a close on 14 July 2024. Showing exclusively at SAM as part of PHOTO 2024 International Photography Festival, this presentation of McGinley’s famed international project marked the artist’s first solo exhibition in Australia.

Consisting of a single artwork featuring over seven hundred vinyl-printed studio portraits of creatives living and working in New York City and adhered to every available inch of wall in the gallery, YEARBOOK envelops the gallery space with bold colour and form. First presented in New York City in 2009, McGinley has shown this ever-evolving work at major public institutions in Tokyo, Denmark, Korea, and Spain. 

Melinda Martin, SAM CEO, says of the exhibition closing:

“It has been such a privilege to welcome visitors to SAM to experience YEARBOOK over the past months. The exhibition contains such joy, inclusivity, and pride, and we’ve found ourselves constantly surprised and thrilled at the responses people have had to the work. It has been wonderful to be able to present an exhibition that so many in our community have been able to connect with through the incredible representation of people, bodies and identities captured by the artist. It’s a real coup for our community to now have our town on the list of locations this exhibition has travelled to, and we hope people can feel a sense of pride from this.

In its final weeks, we invite everyone to visit, enjoy some final moments with these powerful portraits, and perhaps take some time to watch the interview we recorded with Ryan to hear about the process of making and presenting such a monumental and ever-evolving artwork.”

Renowned for his snapshot-casual style of photography, McGinley’s work draws influence from his personal experiences and American street culture from his youth to present day, with a strong focus on queer identities. Described by GQ Magazine in 2014 as “the most important photographer in America”, his artistic style has evolved from the documentary-photography style that first led to his public discovery, to a more orchestrated creative vision. Commencing the project in 2008, the early photos within YEARBOOK represent McGinley’s first forays into colour studio photography, later signaling his shift into an increasingly studio-based practice.

YEARBOOK will be on display on Level 1 at SAM until 14 July 2024 with free entry.

About Ryan McGinley:

Ryan McGinley is a New York–based photographer. His early photos displayed the unseen intersection of skateboard and graffiti culture, with a strong queer focus. At age twenty-five, he became the youngest artist to have a solo show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City (NYC). For over a decade, McGinley has road-tripped continuously throughout the United States to create work that incorporates the human body within the American landscape. Dubbed by GQ as “the most important photographer in America”, McGinley can often be found on the streets of NYC participating in queer activism, fighting for LGBTQIA+ rights. McGinley frequently presents international solo gallery and museum exhibitions and has an ongoing studio practice photographing members of NYC’s creative community. 

About SAM:

Shepparton Art Museum (SAM) is located on Yorta Yorta Country, Shepparton, Victoria.

As a leading Australian regional art museum, SAM showcases its exhibitions and collections in new and exciting ways, creating a welcoming, inclusive, and engaging space for all visitors.

Recognised for its significant Australian ceramics collection and nationally significant collection of Indigenous art, SAM’s programming is designed to be locally relevant and engages with global contemporary ideas. Through its exhibitions, collection, programs and events, SAM creates a place where art helps us to better understand the ancient cultures of this country and contemporary multicultural Australia.

Featured image: Ryan McGinley, YEARBOOK, installation view, Shepparton Art Museum, 2024. Photo: Shepparton Art Museum