Liz Allan

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Revision as of 15:48, 12 October 2012 by Liz (talk | contribs)

WHAT THE

1. At a craft market stall a sign advertises 'While You Wait' illustrations of: "Tales, Yarns, Gossip, Folklore and Histories… of… Rebellion, Impropriety, Transgressions, and Miscreance... etc." I wait, greet people, sit, actively listen, illustrate on paper and also record on audio tape those tales of passers-by who stop in. We sit either side of a cloth-covered card table. Lying on the table is drawing and recording equipment. Sometimes a small crowd gathers. When the passers-by finish recounting their tales I wrap and seal my illustration for them in brown paper. The illustrations are rudimentary, like visual note taking. I keep carbon copies to pin on a board which is fixed to the back of the stall above the bench where people can sit and listen to the audio recordings. Over four weekends and as part of a Public Art Biennale in Christchurch, NZ, Tales Illustrated accumulates 50 or so stories.


2. A commercially hand painted billboard at the entrance to the gallery's building advertises 'Visible Mending' by Garment Repair Services, directing people to the second floor. Within the building and climbing the stairwell, two pointing-finger signs further direct people upwards to the gallery. Here they encounter one of six visible menders ready to barter their services across the faux wood surface of a counter top. Behind the mender stands a small false wall, papered in seventies wallpaper, a facade reminiscent of a stage prop. On it a shelf holding a pot plant, clock, vintage mending tools, and mending in-progress. Menders have requisite needlework skills, including my mother and I. Gallery visitors bring garments to be visibly mended. The bartered transactions include cardboard boxes, a mixed-tape, a puppet show and heirloom recipes. Menders receive their negotiated exchange and gallery visitors receive their garments, mended visibly in the style of the mender they encountered and bartered with. 


3. Across a busy road from a gallery and fixed to the back fence of a large commercial shopping mall, three billboards measuring 2.4m x 3m, display the latest work of a collective of four artists. The billboards meld together a cacophony of original and found imagery with digital and photographic montage techniques. The first billboard displays an image of fireworks exploding in circular bursts against the dark night sky and is situated to the left of the composition, foregrounded by a scene that is bordered in Hazard tape. This scene contains a pile of strewn clothing, above which a layered collage of a digitally degraded woman opens curtains to reveal a background of wide yellow and black diagonal stripes - echoing the bordering hazard tape. The second billboard shows a cropped image of a naked woman's upper torso, her breasts mostly obscured by a pair of hypnotic swirl-filled a-ok hand gestures made with purple fingers. The second and third billboards are partly obscured by digital watermarks: the second reads 'The Gayze Off(TM)' the third 'Queerstock'. The watermark in the second billboard has been scrawled over in fluro green to read The Gayze'z' Off(TM) and in the third billboard a matching fluro green lipstick lies in the foreground. In the background of the third billboard a central portrait shows a shell-like cut out of black, windswept hair in a soccer-mum style and which semi obscures an upside down image of a group of five women. The third panel is bathed in a golden sunlight. The title - 'The Gayez Off!!!'