[spectre] EAF presents Mark Siebert and Fleur Elise Noble 

EAF Director director at eaf.asn.au
Tue May 12 10:25:55 CEST 2009


The Experimental Art Foundation is pleased to present the work of two  
artists:
 

Mark Siebert 
Forever 27

Fleur Elise Noble 
Work in Progress [version 1: drawing installation] 

Curated by Melentie Pandilovski

Opening 6pm Thursday 14 May. 15 May – 13 June
Artists talks 2pm Friday 15 May

 From May to September the exhibitions at the EAF focus on the work of  
artists from Adelaide. Generally emerging, they've begun to attract  
attention. Their concerns are varied and include questions around  
taste, saturated image culture, popular (and not so) music,  
technologically altered and alternate senses, and the processes of  
making work - the perennial 'What for?'  First up, Mark Siebert,  
Forever 27, & Fleur Elise Noble, Work in Progress [version 1: a drawing  
installation] both open on Thursday 14 May.  To be followed by Tristan  
Louth-Robins & Shoot Collective in June-July, and Bridget Currie \ Paul  
Sloan in August-September.

Mark Siebert's Forever 27 is an installation that includes a series of  
photographs and watercolours that explores the cult of the rock star  
and the ill fated age of 27 years. The photographs emulate the deaths  
of the rock stars Siebert considers the ‘most famous’ – Janis Joplin,  
Robert Johnson, Jimi Hendrix, Brian Jones, Kurt Cobain and Jim  
Morrison. Currently aged 27, Mark Siebert’s work has a kind of morbid  
fascination with slacker music culture, laconic, and laid wa-a-ay back.  
In 2007 he exhibited Fan Letters, a series of poorly-typed letters to  
rock stars that had a definite conceptual art feel about them.  
Amusing and sometimes deliberately dumb, the letters touch on  
belonging, identity, and celebrity.  
Stan Mahony writes; “Almost everything is a matter of taste these days.  
Taste is a serious business, and Mark Siebert know it. // Taste equals  
art plus identity, and if art and identity aren’t the bones themselves,  
they’re pretty close. For Siebert, the idea of taste is so horribly  
fraught that to go anywhere near it is to risk unleashing all manner of  
frightening demons” (Forever 27 catalogue essay).

CV Bio Mark Siebert has shown his work in several galleries including:  
Greenaway Art Gallery, Adelaide; The Contemporary Art Centre of South  
Australia; The Experimental Art Foundation, Adelaide; Substation,  
Singapore; Starkwhite, Auckland, New Zealand, Firstdraft Gallery,  
Sydney; Downtown Art Space, Adelaide; Bus Gallery, Melbourne; Raw  
Space, Brisbane; and MOP Projects, Sydney. He was one of the  
co-directors of Downtown Art Space until it closed in December of 2007.  
In 2007 he published a book of fan letters (of the same title) to the  
musicians that have ‘given [him] so much’. Mark Siebert is represented  
by Greenaway Art Gallery, Adelaide.

Fleur Elise Noble works with film, animation, puppetry, projection and  
performance, primarily through the filter of drawing process. Work in  
Progress is a three-dimensional drawing installation that unravels in  
time and space like a theatre production, exploring the performative  
possibilities of image and creation. In this work, film and animation  
occupy the stage as a spatial entity, extending from their usual  
relationship with the rectangle and the two dimensional surface. Work  
in Progress [version 1: drawing installation] is the first draft of The  
2-Dimensional Life of Her, a 40 minute theatre production showing at  
the Queens Theatre, May 18-23, during Come Out Festival.
Roy Ananda writes; “Like the ‘Just-So’ stories of Rudyard Kipling, Work  
in Progress is a pourquoi story: a poetic and fantastical retelling of  
the origins of Noble’s figurative drawings and sculptures. The work  
posits a richly imagined parallel world where drawings reproduce  
themselves, drift between surfaces and move in and out of three  
dimensions. Elegant clay sculptures are chopped up and reconfigured as  
gangly, lurching marionettes. Sheets of paper suspended in space appear  
thickly laden with marks, only to be scrubbed clean, revealing windows  
into yet another parallel reality where the laws of physics are  
different still” (Work in Progress catalogue essay).

CV Bio Fleur Elise Noble studied on a full scholarship at Adelaide  
Central School of Art where she received her Batchelor of Visual Art  
(Honors) in 2006. She was also offered a scholarship from the New York  
Studio School of Drawing Painting and Sculpture where she studied for 1  
year in 2005. Fleur has been the recipient of numerous of grants and  
awards. She has exhibited in New York, Adelaide and Perth, and has been  
involved in performative projects in Edinburgh, Brisbane, Hobart and  
New Zealand. 
further >  (artist’s website) fleurelisenoble.com




------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
-------------------------------------
EXPERIMENTAL ART FOUNDATION
LION ARTS CENTRE, NORTH TERRACE [WEST END] ADELAIDE SOUTH AUSTRALIA11-5  
TUES-FRI; 2-5 SATURDAY | +61 8 8211 7505 info at eaf.asn.au   
www.eaf.asn.au

The EAF is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia  
Council for the arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the  
South Australian Government
through Arts SA. The EAF is also supported through the Visual Arts and  
Craft Strategy, an initiative of the Australian, State and Territory  
Governments.

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