Katie Lambert Tap Gallery
Announcing the PYRMONT ART PRIZE 2022 in conjunction with the Food & Wine Fair 28 & 29 May 2022
Pyrmont Art Prize
Saturday 28th & Sunday 29th May 2022SPONSORED BY DERIVAN PAINTS
Calling all artists – Pyrmont Art Prize 2022. Sat/Sun 28/29 MAY 22 at Pirrama Park, Ultimo. Entry $20. Works up to 40×50 cm on stretched canvas (no frames or glass). Use your own canvas, or collect a canvas from TAP Art Gallery, 259 Riley St, Surry Hills (12-pm daily)
CALL: 0400610440. Submit works to TAP Art Gallery by Wednesday 25TH MAY 12-6PM.
TAP will be giving 2 art classes at the Festival on Saturday 28th and Sunday 29th May at 2-4 pm
All materials supplied including aprons and you’ll have a finished masterpiece to take home.
Book your tickets using this link for “Van Gogh’s Cat” class on Saturday 28th May: 2pm
and this link for “Bondi Life Savers” class on Sunday 29th May:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/painting-in-the-park-bondi-life-savers-tickets-327897539367
In conjunction with the Pyrmont Food and Wine Festival.
The Real Refusés – People’s Choice Winner is Veda Rajesh with “Tula”
TAP Gallery acknowledges the support of the City of Sydney
Cultural Sector Resilience Grant
which has enabled the gallery to honour artists who were unable to exhibit
during COVID 19 LOCKDOWN.
For the past 24 years TAP Gallery has hosted the
REAL REFUSES
Being hung in the AGNSW is a prestigious achievement.
Never give up!!
Every year I go in the Archibald., knowing I probably will not be selected, however I can at least show the work to my peers & the public at TAP Gallery.
Not every one can get hung in the AGNSW but we guarantee to hang all rejected works at TAP GALLERY.
See our online gallery of works from previous Tap Real Refuse’s shows.
If we encourage each other every year to enter, one of us will get hung at some time in our artistic career.
ARTWORKS ARE COMING IN.
WE ARE TAKING WORKS UNTIL NEXT FRIDAY 2ND OCT 12-6PM
BELOW:
The Love of a Father (Dr Paul Mason)
by Krista Elliott
is one the wonderful entries that will be on display in the REAL REFUSE
Real Refuses has become firmly established as part of the “Archibald Season”.
While it is an exhibition of rejected artwork, it is much more than that…
It is about giving a fair go to all the artists involved in Australia’s largest art events.
Not everyone can win an Archibald but here everyone can exhibit along side their peers. (You’ll find past winners of Australia’s biggest art prizes here as well!)
In the past an extraordinary range of subjects from musicians, actors, politicians including the NSW Premier, Mayor of Willoughby, Anthony Mundeen, Tony Abbott, Leo Sawyer, the then Prime Minister John Howard, Madame Lash, Elizabeth Cummings, Professor Bruce James Brew, and Jaiwei, (a winner of the Sulman.)
We can’t wait to see the works not selected this year
GALA OPENING: Saturday 3 October 5-8pm 2020
(includes the “People’s Choice Award”)
Prizes to be won!
ON VIEW: 3-18 Oct 2020 12-6pm Daily
TAP GALLERY, 1/259 Riley St Surry Hills 2010
CONTACT: Lesley Dimmick, TAP GALLERY on 0400610440
WOMEN IN TUBS AND WASH BASKETS – Vee Malnar 21st Sept – 1st Oct Opening Night Tuesday 22 Sept 6-9pm Artist’s Talk and music Sunday 27 Sept 4-7pm
Vee is a multi-media artist, playwright, painter, and performer. Her resume includes volumes of work as a visual artist, singer-songwriter and short film maker. Her plays have been performed in Short and Sweet Sydney, and her music profiles Ana Key and the Underdogs (Squeeze Records) and Matriarch. She is a graduate of Wollongong University’s Creative Arts Course and since 1987 has sold a number of works through solo and group exhibitions. She has previously run Mamapalooza events in Sydney generating more creativity for mothers in the arts.
Vee, unconventional by nature, portrays the unusual importance of domesticity in her paintings. Having juggled a busy life of going to work, mothering and housework, her ideas on canvas portray a snapshot of ordinary life, but with an absurd tone. There is often a political statement, subtle or wildly over the top. Kitchen sinks, washing baskets, mops, brooms and vacuum cleaners, all taking the limelight and delighting the eye with humour, colour and imagination. But underlying the playful subject matter could be a controversial discourse about housework, the division of labour, and women’s continuing efforts to achieve equality.
“Housework is still overwhelmingly done by women even though many also work like their husbands, and most childcare is still women’s responsibility. The division of housework is politics at play in the home…Housework should be paid work, like all other jobs but, …”housework is considered trivial, playing second fiddle to “paid” work.” The National, 2014
Vee doesn’t see her paintings as being political. She says they are really about the object itself. She finds beauty in the actual object, the mop, the broom or the vacuum cleaner, but she does admit giving status to the object. Her elevation of household items to be seen as greater in themselves, than being taken for granted, is a metaphor for the status of housework, as well as status of women, housewives, and mothers.
Whatever you see in Vee’s work, whether it’s political or not, the images will have a lasting impact.
All enquiries
TAP Gallery. 0400610440
FRANKIE NANKIVELL – Unique, Topical & Fun – See urban life through Frankie’s eyes.4 -10 November. meet the artists 5pm Saturday 9th November.
FRANKIE NANKIVELL
4 -10 November. meet the artists 5pm Saturday 9th November.
Unique, Topical, & Fun -See urban life through Frankie’s eyes.