Intoxication in a New Skill:
Ian Burn at Guzzler
Published by Guzzler, Melbourne, 2024, 50 pp. (b/w ill.), 21 × 29.7 cm, English
Price: €20

This catalogue is the outcome of research into Australian artist Ian Burn’s work of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Grounded in the traditional genres of landscape, still life and portrait, little is known about this early work, yet a substantial collection of it – juvenilia, art school paintings, yearbook cartoons, hinged boxes, paint palettes, still lifes, orientalist prints and more-resides at the artist’s brother Robert’s house in Newtown, Geelong. This material has not been exhibited or reproduced previously and thus expands knowledge of the artist’s oeuvre.

Documented are two exhibitions of Burn’s early work held at Guzzler gallery in 2022 and 2023. The first exhibition rehung his ambitious entry into the 1962 Travelling Scholarship Prize at the National Gallery School, Melbourne, a large Antipodean-esque painting of a bar scene. The second exhibition, comprised of several genre pictures and a drawing exercise, further showcased the humble origins of Burn’s art.

Author: David Homewood
Design: Alexandra Margetic
Photography: Luke Sands

#2024 #alexandramargetic #davidhomewood #guzzler #ianburn #lukesands
University Construction
Published by David Homewood, Melbourne, 2016, 48 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 21.5 × 29.7 cm, English
Price: €20

University Construction was a one-day exhibition by David Homewood and Bronté Lambert. It was held in a sixth floor classroom in the west tower of the John Medley Building at the University of Melbourne. The exhibition was open from 11am to 7pm on the 23 June, 2015, and included a variety of readymade, found and modified objects—many sourced from the university campus—presented in geometric configurations on the classroom floor, accompanied by a printed flyer and information sheet.

#2016 #davidhomewood
CARPARK
David Homewood (Ed.)
Published by Guzzler, Melbourne, 2020, 168 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 15 × 22.5 cm, English
Price: €40

Carpark was an exhibition-for-documentation by David Homewood, Luke Sands and Alex Vivian that was held over three Tuesday mornings, 4th October, 18th October and 1st November 2016, at Kew Junction Woolworths underground carpark.

Included in this publication are various texts by Daniel Dawson: theories and conspiracies, shopping lists, debt lists and inventories, confessions, poems, posts, rants and stories that were written between 2014 and 2019 along with an essay by Justin Clemens. Designed by Alexandra Margetic.

#2020 #alexvivian #davidhomewood #justinclemens #lukesands
Texts
Elizabeth Newman
Published by Discipline, Melbourne, 2019, 192 pages, 10.8 × 17.6 cm, English
Price: €9

Elizabeth Newman is best known as a visual artist whose practice encompasses a variety of media including painting, drawing, sculpture, and installation. Writing, too, is central to her art. As indicated by the twenty-five or so texts compiled in this book, all dating from the last fifteen years, Newman’s literary output extends beyond her studio practice. Many of these texts are about artworks and exhibitions—her own as well as those of other local artists: they serve a critical rather than an aesthetic function. As such, these writings offer valuable insight into Newman’s artistic intentions and motivations, and her commentaries on the art of her peers constitute a compelling partial survey of art produced in Melbourne over the last decade and a half.

Edited by David Homewood and designed by Robert Milne.

#2019 #davidhomewood #discipline #elizabethnewman #robertmilne #theory
Discipline Nº 5
Published by Discipline, Melbourne, 2019, 304 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 23 × 30 cm, English
Price: €14

Edited by Helen Hughes and David Homewood (Discipline Nº 5); Carla Macchiavello and Camila Marambio (Más allá del fin Nº 3); and designed by Robert Milne.

Discipline, Más allá del fin (translating to ‘discipline beyond the end’)—represents an effort to map a South–South relationship between Chile and Australia, and even more specifically, between its southernmost island tips: Tierra del Fuego and Tasmania. For centuries, the Northern imagination conceived of these places as the very personification of distance itself, whereas the editors of Más allá del fin refer to Tierra del Fuego as ‘the centre of the known universe’. In addition to publishing a range of essays on modern and contemporary art, this joint issue recentres and forges new connections between Southern perspectives, generating a dynamic and relational art history of the contemporary.

You can see a full list of contents here.

#2019 #adsdonaldson #davidhomewood #discipline #georgeegertonwarburton #helenhughes #michaelstevenson #quentinsprague #robertmilne #taramcdowell #tomnicholson