John Dahlsen
Environmental Art
Art which responds to our environment and
to our global community, conveying the soul of things
through creativity.
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Early Paintings
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Early Works on Paper
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Later Paintings
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
‘Occasionally an exhibition reminds us that the visual
arts are first and foremost a struggle for liberty of
thought and deed, they are not and never can be an
industry. Good art can never be reduced to a minor
form of luxury goods.
Artists can achieve completely unexpected insights
into their work and into human experience as a whole.
These revelations that life can be made anew is the
essential goal of all art. They inevitably go far beyond
the need to make a saleable product.’
David Bromfield, Review: of John Dahlsen’s paintings and drawings exhibition.
Assemblage Wall Works
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
C L O S E R L O O K - Turning the Tide
Recycled items make artful social commentary.
By John T. Spike
Published in the International Art Magazine 'Art & Antiques' Summer Edition 2004.
Artists can be compared to bees, American philosopher Buckminster Fuller has pointed out. A
bee gathers nectar to make honey; yet what it’s really doing, one might say, is pollinating
flowers. So artists often find that their actions have unexpected consequences.
John Dahlsen is a contemporary Australian artist whose wide-ranging interests lead him in many
directions—from abstract painting to digital photography to sculptures in public squares. In his
leisure time, Dahlsen enjoys strolling along the splendid sandy beaches near his home in Byron
Bay. Unfortunately, even the virgin coasts of Australia are besmirched by picnic litter and soda
cans washed up by the tide and on occasion, Dahlsen will pick these items up, as many of us
would.
One day about a decade ago it struck him just how much brightly colored junk was lying about in
plain sight. The shore and dunes were sparkling with pieces of red, blue, black, white and clear
plastic. In a gesture that initially seemed futile, Dahlsen started filling sacks with refuse and
bringing them home to sort. Most of the bottle tops, children’s combs, bubble pipes, hair clips
and innumerable other broken and sundry bits of plastic turned out to be dyed in the same few
colors. Soon his rubbish bins were over- flowing with colorful assemblages of objects that were
indistinguishable except for their shapes. Unified in this way, the beach debris seemed less ugly.
This made Dahlsen wonder if he could somehow make his pickings seem almost beautiful.
Unlikely as it sounds, the answer turned out to be yes. Even back then, the idea of
composing with “found objects” was neither radical nor new. Forerunners like Kurt Schwitters
in the 1920s and Robert Rauschenberg in the ’60s used ticket stubs and auto parts for much
the same reason that the Old Masters painted gold watches and sputtering candles: as signs
of the ephemerality of life and our worldly possessions.
Dahlsen, by comparison, is an optimist. To begin with, he’s already made a positive
statement by clearing off the unsightly stuff that is lethal to fish and fowl. (Australia’s wildlife
conservancies adore Dahlsen’s work, which was hardly his intention, but so be it.) He
wanted to impart a kind of Minimalist stability to his jumbles of deep true colors. One early
assemblage of coffee lids, cooler fragments and bottle tops shared the ethereal white-on-
white aura of a Robert Ryman abstraction or a William Bailey still life—only much more
energetically. Piling up black combs, disposable razors and pieces of rope yielded a Louise
Nevelson-like sculpture with attitude.
Beachcombers are always on the move, of course, and “Blue Rope (Triptych),” a new work,
shows that Dahlsen has started to take the risk of mixing his colors. One would never
suspect there could be anything “romantic” about a stratified miscellany of nylon ropes,
plastic garbage bags and fish nets, but it is hard to avoid the impression that its undulations
evoke a deep blue ocean and the tangled ropes are a little like storm tossed clouds. But it
would be absurd to read anything into such a mishmash. Or would it? Besides, unlike
Rauschenberg in pursuit of a decisive detail, Dahlsen likes to group his finds in categories
and ask himself what it means that our age works in plastic, as opposed to stone, bronze or
iron. Dahlsen, in other words, has become an artful archaeologist. •
John T. Spike is the director of the Florence International Biennial of Contemporary Art.
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Totems
My work is in a constant state of evolution. I see this
largely as alchemical. It is the process of nature’s
elements redefining the man-made that creates the
initial alchemy, taking the objects beyond the
mundane.
The second step is achieved through the transportation
of these plastics to my studio and the process of
sorting and assembling.
A further and more vital transformation takes place as I
assemble them. These found objects then start to tell
their story and become transformed into artworks.
Most importantly for me, the assembled objects bring
to life my commitment as an artist to express
contemporary social, spiritual and environmental
concerns.
Comments are regularly made to me about people’s
consciousness, while walking the beach, being
awakened after seeing my found plastic object
artworks.
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
The central concerns of my work are with contemporary art
practice and working with found and recycled objects, most
hand-picked by myself from somewhere along the Australian
Coastline.
The unabated dumping of thousands of tonnes of plastics is
expressed in my assemblages, installations, totems and prints.
And yet, despite my outrage at this environmental vandalism,
I return to the beach daily to find more pieces for my artist’s
palette.
In an uncanny way, these plastics, as I sort them and arrange
them in my studio take on an indefinable beauty, which
fascinates me.
Driftwood Assemblage Works
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
My creative medium shifted from painting to working with found
objects as a result of an artistic accident during the mid 1990’s.
I was collecting driftwood, on a remote Southern Australian
Coastline and stumbled upon vast amounts of plastic ocean debris.
This whole new palette of colour and shape revealing itself
immediately affected me. I had never seen such hues and forms
before.
Since then, I have scoured Australian beaches for found objects,
much of which I have found as washed up ‘ocean litter’ and have
since discovered this litter is a worldwide phenomenon, affecting
beaches on a global level.
I bring these plastics back to my studio to sort, and colour-code
for my assemblages, sculptures and installations.
As I work with these objects, I become even more fascinated by
the way they have been modified and weathered by the ocean
and the elements.
I take these found objects, which might on first meeting have no
apparent dialogue, and work with them until they tell their story,
which includes underlying environmental messages.
Sculpture &
Suspended Installations
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Recycled Plastic Bag
Wall Works
• I am with this work, apart from wishing to express obvious
environmental messages, particularly interested in the brilliance
of the colours and textures available to me in working with this
medium. I am constantly surprised to see the variations in these
plastics, very much like how I am intrigued by the beach found
objects I have collected over the years.
• I imagine these plastic bags, which mostly have a lifespan of
many years, are in fact on the verge of extinction, as it is only a
matter of time before governments impose such strict deterrents
to people using them that they become a thing of the past. A
fitting end to what has become such a scourge to our
environment on a worldwide scale.
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
A 2005 report by the Australian Department of the Environment, Water,
Heritage and the Arts noted the following:
In 2005, Australians used 3.92 billion lightweight single use high density
polyethylene (HDPE) bags. 2.14 billion of these came from supermarkets,
while the others were used by fast food restaurants, service stations,
convenience stores and liquor stores and other shops.
Plastic bags are popular with consumers and retailers as they are a
functional, lightweight, strong, cheap, and hygienic way to transport food
and other products.
Most of these go to landfill (rubbish tips) after they are used, and some are
recycled. In 2002 around 50 to 80 million bags ended up as litter in our
environment. While the number littered has probably been reduced since
then, it is likely that a large number still enter the environment. Once
littered, plastic bags can find their way on to our streets, parks, and into our
waterways.
Although plastic bags make up only a small percentage of all litter, the
impact of these bags is nevertheless significant. Plastic bags create visual
pollution problems and can have harmful effects on aquatic and terrestrial
animals. Plastic bags are particularly noticeable components of the litter
stream due to their size and can take a long time to fully break down.
The Australian Government is working with industry and the community to reduce the
environmental impact of plastic bags. However, everyone shares some responsibility
for this problem - from plastic bag manufacturers and importers who sell the bags,
shop keepers who give them away, and the customers who use them. It is up to all of
us to help find the solution.
In recent years, many people have started to use reusable bags, such as the 'green
bags' you can buy at most supermarkets. Because of these efforts, the number of
HDPE bags used in Australia has fallen from around 6 billion in 2002 to 3.92 billion in
2005. However, there is a lot more that can be done.
Plastic bag facts
* Australians used 3.92 billion plastic shopping bags per year.
* Nearly half a million plastic bags are collected on Clean Up Australia Day each year.
(source - CUA)
* It takes only four grocery shopping trips for an average Australian family to
accumulate 60 plastic shopping bags. (source - CUA)
* Plastic bags are produced from polymers derived from petroleum. The amount of
petroleum used to make a plastic bag would drive a car about 11 metres. (source -
CUA)
* In 2005, Australians used 192 HDPE bags per capita. (source - Nolan ITU)
* 14% of HDPE plastic carry bags are returned to major supermarkets for recycling.
(source - ANRA)
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
The Irish Government imposed a 10 cent levy on the use of these bags
some years ago and saw the consumption of this product decrease by
approximately 90% within a year, a reduction of many billions of plastic
bags per year!
Once again, I am able as a contemporary visual artist, to use these
recycled materials, to create artworks which I hope, express a certain
beauty as well as containing their own unique environmental messages.
This is my way of making a difference, and at the same time I’m sharing a
positive message about beauty that can be gained from the aesthetic
experience of appreciating art, as well as giving examples of how we can
recycle and reuse in creative ways. These artworks exemplify my
commitment as an artist to express contemporary social and
environmental concerns.
Installations
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Digital Prints
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
Public Artworks &
Commissions
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
One of the central positions of my work is to
create things of beauty.
Over the years I have chosen a challenging
medium - discarded junk or recycled items -
that have mostly been at some time in the
process of being transformed by nature.
My role has been to transform it further, into
a work of art that makes a strong statement
while offering a positive aesthetic
experience.
I get on this razors edge line between fulfilment
and frustration, knowing that I am able to only
ever provide through my creativity a glimpse of
the vastness that is life - a fragment of what is
essentially the ineffable.
John Dahlsen
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
The Recent Paintings: Sea and Landscapes
These paintings were made in 2007 and 2008 as a continued response to my local
environment.
I remember saying in interviews with the media during the late 90’s, that I hoped
that one day I would see less and less litter washing up on our beaches, so that
quite naturally my work would find a new direction. This has now happened – on a
local level at least. The situation on a global level has worsened considerably.
After more than 10 years of collecting beach found objects and subsequently
making art out of them, I’ve naturally come now to a new form of expression, which
was brought on significantly as a result of the decrease in litter either washing up
or being left behind on our beaches, as well as a result of my purge painting series
and exploration.
Painting the Byron Bay local seascapes and landscapes, mostly images seen by
me on my daily walk around the lighthouse and beaches, are painted somewhat
with a sense of urgency, due to my ever growing concerns about global warming
and its impact.
The viewer can see these works have a certain unmistakable mood within each
piece, which has been written about by Dr Jacqueline Millner from the University of
Western Sydney, seen in the next slide:
“This play between abstraction and figuration, between synthetic/organic matter
and immateriality in the purge paintings, has been applied in Dahlsen’s most
recent works to landscapes — dark works whose subtle references to
environmental degradation all but disappear before forcefully catching you
unawares.
This tension between inorganic abstraction and emotionally charged organism
lends these works particular resonance, given their inception in the politics of
environmental art.
They play out, in elegant and economical aesthetics, the unstable boundaries
between the natural and the artificial, reminding us of Wendell Berry’s paradox
that ‘the only thing we have to preserve nature with is culture; the only thing we
have to preserve wildness with is domesticity”
Steven Alderton in his Artspeak column in Australian newspaper, “The Northern
Star”, went on to say about the new work: John has been working on a very
successful new body of work that extends from his previous enviro sculptures
into paintings. They are of the places he has collected detritus for his
sculptures. The subject matter also happens to be Byron Bay, a place of infinite
beauty and great affection.
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
2009 Driftwood Sculptures
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013
John Dahlsen
John is based in Byron Bay Australia. His artistic training began at the Victorian
College of the Arts and then later at the Melbourne College of Advanced Education.
He won Australia’s oldest art award, the prestigious Wynne prize, at the AGNSW in
2000 and was again a finalist in 2003 and 2004. In 2006 he was a finalist in the
Sulman Award at the Art Gallery of NSW. He has won other significant acquisitive
and non-acquisitive art awards, including a mixed media/new media award at the
2003 Florence Biennial.
As well as lecturing at various universities and schools from 1980 – 2008, He has
been an invited speaker at architectural and environmental symposiums in Australia
and Internationally, including at the Australian Embassy in Washington DC, which
coincided with an exhibition of his work there in 1999.
For 28 years he has had regular solo and group exhibitions in Australia, in both
commercial and regional galleries and Internationally, in USA and Europe, where he
is also represented in major public and private collections. Galleries represent him in
Australia, as well as in New York, Milan, Belgium and Amsterdam.
In August 2004, Dahlsen represented Australia at the Athens Olympics of Visual
Arts and in October 2004, he became the first Australian artist, (he joins such
renowned artists as Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Francesco Clemente and Damien
Hirst), to be commissioned by global vodka producer Absolut to create a major
public artwork “Absolut Dahlsen” which was unveiled at Sculpture by the Sea in
John’s art has been written about in major Australian and International
newspapers. His work has been featured in many magazines and in International
Art publications. Television includes coverage on all Australian channels and many
international programmes. He currently has a major presentation and interview on
ABC online.
He had a major solo exhibition of his work at the Tweed Regional Art Gallery in
February 2005 and his sculpture “Pink Shard” made from fused toughened glass
panels with a plastic interlayer bearing image won him another award, at the 2005
Thursday Plantation East Coast Sculpture Show.
Later in 2005, he curated as well as participated in an exhibition at the Samuel
Dorsky Museum, in New York State in the USA; he also took up an artist in
residence position in Jefferson City Missouri, USA in September 2005, where he
made a public artwork for their sculpture walk.
During June 2006, he had a solo exhibition at parliament house in Sydney.
In December 2006, John was awarded the runner up prize in Australia’s newest,
and now the richest art award, The Signature of Sydney Art Prize. In late
November 2007 John’s work was exhibited in New York State in an exhibition titled
“Ecological Integrity / On The Brink”
In March 2008 John was an invited guest of the North Stonington Education
Foundation, to work with students and to deliver a lecture at Mystic Aquarium and
Institute for Exploration Mystic Connecticut USA.
John is represented by major public and private collections across Australia, he is
also in many International collections in Europe, USA and Japan.
John was awarded in 2009, the Swell Sculpture Exhibition "Environmental Art
Award", Currumbin, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia. He went on to win this prize again in
September 2010.In July 2010, he won the Peoples Choice Award in the ArtsCape
Biennial Sculpture Exhibition. Byron Bay, NSW Australia for his 6m x 4m x 3m
sculpture: “Monumental Environmental Artwork” which he made from a recycled
Camphor Laurel tree root ball and trunk. In September 2010 John's work featured at
the famed "Hanmo Gallery" in Beijing's 798 contemporary art district in China.
March 2011 saw John being commissioned by the Commonwealth Bank to create a
major sculpture for their new HQ, from objects collected from the annual Clean up
Australia campaign in Sydney.
John was appointed " Cultural Ambassador" for Friends of the United Nations, on He
was invited in 2012 by the United Nations to write an essay for the Rio+20
conference. Dahlsen’s essay, titled “The Future we want” appears on the UN website
for the Rio+20 conference. And can be seen here:
http://www.un.org/en/sustainablefuture/dahlsen.shtml In 2013 John was offered
a Doctorate of Philosophy (PhD Candidature) at the Charles Darwin University N.T.
Australia.

More Related Content

PDF
PlasticLife
PPTX
Newgroup
PPT
Ind eng-078-ppt
PDF
Built to Last
KEY
Trash ppt
PPTX
Plastics
PPS
Plastic Damage
PPT
Plastic1
PlasticLife
Newgroup
Ind eng-078-ppt
Built to Last
Trash ppt
Plastics
Plastic Damage
Plastic1

What's hot (12)

PPTX
Avoid plastic, save world
PPT
Environmental Art
PPT
Recycling power point
PPT
Environmental Art
PDF
Environmental art teachers resource
PDF
Sin eng-27 - plastic vs planet presentation
PPTX
Recycling pptcis100
PPT
We love environment by Green Yatra
PPTX
Bottled Water
PPT
Army Public School
PDF
Deep sustainability: art, ecology and politics of forests - Red Stables Art &...
PPT
Garbage And Recycling
Avoid plastic, save world
Environmental Art
Recycling power point
Environmental Art
Environmental art teachers resource
Sin eng-27 - plastic vs planet presentation
Recycling pptcis100
We love environment by Green Yatra
Bottled Water
Army Public School
Deep sustainability: art, ecology and politics of forests - Red Stables Art &...
Garbage And Recycling
Ad

Similar to John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013 (20)

PPTX
John dahlsen
PDF
Green Team Gazette 2.2 October 09
PPTX
Plastic mountain a plastic awareness public art project
PPTX
Ocean- By Polish Team
PDF
Beauty from detritus aestheticizing discards in the visual arts
PPTX
Identifying and classifying sea rubbish
PDF
PET Lamp News
PDF
THE Stylymate, Issue 02|2021 think! and then act rights
PDF
Plastic Ocean Art And Science Responses To Marine Pollution Ingeborg Reichle ...
PPT
Recycling and earth day pp
DOCX
Kayla's plastic pollution
PDF
18 Saksala Art Radius Catalogue Sculpture Symposium 2005
PDF
Collective 20 at Gallery 1313
PDF
07 the process of recycling
PDF
Green Team Gazette 2.7 March 2010
PDF
Norman brodeur william nichols associates artist famous paintings
PDF
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
PDF
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
PDF
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
PDF
Plastic mountain - a plastic awareness public art project
John dahlsen
Green Team Gazette 2.2 October 09
Plastic mountain a plastic awareness public art project
Ocean- By Polish Team
Beauty from detritus aestheticizing discards in the visual arts
Identifying and classifying sea rubbish
PET Lamp News
THE Stylymate, Issue 02|2021 think! and then act rights
Plastic Ocean Art And Science Responses To Marine Pollution Ingeborg Reichle ...
Recycling and earth day pp
Kayla's plastic pollution
18 Saksala Art Radius Catalogue Sculpture Symposium 2005
Collective 20 at Gallery 1313
07 the process of recycling
Green Team Gazette 2.7 March 2010
Norman brodeur william nichols associates artist famous paintings
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
Norman brodeur artist famous paintings
Plastic mountain - a plastic awareness public art project
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Avast Premium Security Crack Full Download (Latest 2025)
PPTX
AEN 302 - Brinjal, Bhendi, Tomato Pests - PPT 1 - Agri Junction.pptx.pptx
PPTX
Social Awareness on Municipal Solid Waste.pptx
PPTX
Cloud Computing ppt[1].pptxkuti7t888tt8iug
PDF
Disney Junior's Pupstruction: Great Outdoors Song
PDF
KarolG CarRace Sequence...why a 40 character minimum for a title?
PDF
Siemens NX 2506 Build 4001 Crack Free Latest Version 2025
PDF
Fortnite Space Shooter With Latest Popular Pop Star
DOC
UD毕业证学历认证,布兰戴斯大学毕业证学位认证
PPTX
Basic Template Presentation for Usage Business
PPTX
Goal - its setting ,tracking and relevance
PPTX
Peribott dynamic LLP In Hyderabad, Telangana, India
PPTX
very useful for every thing in this area
PDF
On vacation to the wonder of the world Machu Picchu.pdf
PDF
D009 - Lahoo Ke Pyaase. its a hindi comics
PPTX
Addition and Subtraction Word Problems Math Presentation Orange in Pink an_20...
PPTX
VE_Situational_Question_Set1___2et2.pptx
PDF
Overlord Volume 06 - The Men in the Kingdom Part II.pdf
PPTX
Exploring Family-Friendly, Top-Rated Aqua Destinations
PPTX
701301-Happy Birthday Slideshow Template.pptx
Avast Premium Security Crack Full Download (Latest 2025)
AEN 302 - Brinjal, Bhendi, Tomato Pests - PPT 1 - Agri Junction.pptx.pptx
Social Awareness on Municipal Solid Waste.pptx
Cloud Computing ppt[1].pptxkuti7t888tt8iug
Disney Junior's Pupstruction: Great Outdoors Song
KarolG CarRace Sequence...why a 40 character minimum for a title?
Siemens NX 2506 Build 4001 Crack Free Latest Version 2025
Fortnite Space Shooter With Latest Popular Pop Star
UD毕业证学历认证,布兰戴斯大学毕业证学位认证
Basic Template Presentation for Usage Business
Goal - its setting ,tracking and relevance
Peribott dynamic LLP In Hyderabad, Telangana, India
very useful for every thing in this area
On vacation to the wonder of the world Machu Picchu.pdf
D009 - Lahoo Ke Pyaase. its a hindi comics
Addition and Subtraction Word Problems Math Presentation Orange in Pink an_20...
VE_Situational_Question_Set1___2et2.pptx
Overlord Volume 06 - The Men in the Kingdom Part II.pdf
Exploring Family-Friendly, Top-Rated Aqua Destinations
701301-Happy Birthday Slideshow Template.pptx

John dahlsen powerpoint presentation_2013

  • 2. Art which responds to our environment and to our global community, conveying the soul of things through creativity.
  • 21. ‘Occasionally an exhibition reminds us that the visual arts are first and foremost a struggle for liberty of thought and deed, they are not and never can be an industry. Good art can never be reduced to a minor form of luxury goods. Artists can achieve completely unexpected insights into their work and into human experience as a whole. These revelations that life can be made anew is the essential goal of all art. They inevitably go far beyond the need to make a saleable product.’ David Bromfield, Review: of John Dahlsen’s paintings and drawings exhibition.
  • 40. C L O S E R L O O K - Turning the Tide Recycled items make artful social commentary. By John T. Spike Published in the International Art Magazine 'Art & Antiques' Summer Edition 2004. Artists can be compared to bees, American philosopher Buckminster Fuller has pointed out. A bee gathers nectar to make honey; yet what it’s really doing, one might say, is pollinating flowers. So artists often find that their actions have unexpected consequences. John Dahlsen is a contemporary Australian artist whose wide-ranging interests lead him in many directions—from abstract painting to digital photography to sculptures in public squares. In his leisure time, Dahlsen enjoys strolling along the splendid sandy beaches near his home in Byron Bay. Unfortunately, even the virgin coasts of Australia are besmirched by picnic litter and soda cans washed up by the tide and on occasion, Dahlsen will pick these items up, as many of us would. One day about a decade ago it struck him just how much brightly colored junk was lying about in plain sight. The shore and dunes were sparkling with pieces of red, blue, black, white and clear plastic. In a gesture that initially seemed futile, Dahlsen started filling sacks with refuse and bringing them home to sort. Most of the bottle tops, children’s combs, bubble pipes, hair clips and innumerable other broken and sundry bits of plastic turned out to be dyed in the same few colors. Soon his rubbish bins were over- flowing with colorful assemblages of objects that were indistinguishable except for their shapes. Unified in this way, the beach debris seemed less ugly.
  • 41. This made Dahlsen wonder if he could somehow make his pickings seem almost beautiful. Unlikely as it sounds, the answer turned out to be yes. Even back then, the idea of composing with “found objects” was neither radical nor new. Forerunners like Kurt Schwitters in the 1920s and Robert Rauschenberg in the ’60s used ticket stubs and auto parts for much the same reason that the Old Masters painted gold watches and sputtering candles: as signs of the ephemerality of life and our worldly possessions. Dahlsen, by comparison, is an optimist. To begin with, he’s already made a positive statement by clearing off the unsightly stuff that is lethal to fish and fowl. (Australia’s wildlife conservancies adore Dahlsen’s work, which was hardly his intention, but so be it.) He wanted to impart a kind of Minimalist stability to his jumbles of deep true colors. One early assemblage of coffee lids, cooler fragments and bottle tops shared the ethereal white-on- white aura of a Robert Ryman abstraction or a William Bailey still life—only much more energetically. Piling up black combs, disposable razors and pieces of rope yielded a Louise Nevelson-like sculpture with attitude. Beachcombers are always on the move, of course, and “Blue Rope (Triptych),” a new work, shows that Dahlsen has started to take the risk of mixing his colors. One would never suspect there could be anything “romantic” about a stratified miscellany of nylon ropes, plastic garbage bags and fish nets, but it is hard to avoid the impression that its undulations evoke a deep blue ocean and the tangled ropes are a little like storm tossed clouds. But it would be absurd to read anything into such a mishmash. Or would it? Besides, unlike Rauschenberg in pursuit of a decisive detail, Dahlsen likes to group his finds in categories and ask himself what it means that our age works in plastic, as opposed to stone, bronze or iron. Dahlsen, in other words, has become an artful archaeologist. • John T. Spike is the director of the Florence International Biennial of Contemporary Art.
  • 46. My work is in a constant state of evolution. I see this largely as alchemical. It is the process of nature’s elements redefining the man-made that creates the initial alchemy, taking the objects beyond the mundane. The second step is achieved through the transportation of these plastics to my studio and the process of sorting and assembling. A further and more vital transformation takes place as I assemble them. These found objects then start to tell their story and become transformed into artworks.
  • 47. Most importantly for me, the assembled objects bring to life my commitment as an artist to express contemporary social, spiritual and environmental concerns. Comments are regularly made to me about people’s consciousness, while walking the beach, being awakened after seeing my found plastic object artworks.
  • 56. The central concerns of my work are with contemporary art practice and working with found and recycled objects, most hand-picked by myself from somewhere along the Australian Coastline. The unabated dumping of thousands of tonnes of plastics is expressed in my assemblages, installations, totems and prints. And yet, despite my outrage at this environmental vandalism, I return to the beach daily to find more pieces for my artist’s palette. In an uncanny way, these plastics, as I sort them and arrange them in my studio take on an indefinable beauty, which fascinates me.
  • 64. My creative medium shifted from painting to working with found objects as a result of an artistic accident during the mid 1990’s. I was collecting driftwood, on a remote Southern Australian Coastline and stumbled upon vast amounts of plastic ocean debris. This whole new palette of colour and shape revealing itself immediately affected me. I had never seen such hues and forms before. Since then, I have scoured Australian beaches for found objects, much of which I have found as washed up ‘ocean litter’ and have since discovered this litter is a worldwide phenomenon, affecting beaches on a global level.
  • 65. I bring these plastics back to my studio to sort, and colour-code for my assemblages, sculptures and installations. As I work with these objects, I become even more fascinated by the way they have been modified and weathered by the ocean and the elements. I take these found objects, which might on first meeting have no apparent dialogue, and work with them until they tell their story, which includes underlying environmental messages.
  • 73. • I am with this work, apart from wishing to express obvious environmental messages, particularly interested in the brilliance of the colours and textures available to me in working with this medium. I am constantly surprised to see the variations in these plastics, very much like how I am intrigued by the beach found objects I have collected over the years. • I imagine these plastic bags, which mostly have a lifespan of many years, are in fact on the verge of extinction, as it is only a matter of time before governments impose such strict deterrents to people using them that they become a thing of the past. A fitting end to what has become such a scourge to our environment on a worldwide scale.
  • 78. A 2005 report by the Australian Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts noted the following: In 2005, Australians used 3.92 billion lightweight single use high density polyethylene (HDPE) bags. 2.14 billion of these came from supermarkets, while the others were used by fast food restaurants, service stations, convenience stores and liquor stores and other shops. Plastic bags are popular with consumers and retailers as they are a functional, lightweight, strong, cheap, and hygienic way to transport food and other products. Most of these go to landfill (rubbish tips) after they are used, and some are recycled. In 2002 around 50 to 80 million bags ended up as litter in our environment. While the number littered has probably been reduced since then, it is likely that a large number still enter the environment. Once littered, plastic bags can find their way on to our streets, parks, and into our waterways. Although plastic bags make up only a small percentage of all litter, the impact of these bags is nevertheless significant. Plastic bags create visual pollution problems and can have harmful effects on aquatic and terrestrial animals. Plastic bags are particularly noticeable components of the litter stream due to their size and can take a long time to fully break down.
  • 79. The Australian Government is working with industry and the community to reduce the environmental impact of plastic bags. However, everyone shares some responsibility for this problem - from plastic bag manufacturers and importers who sell the bags, shop keepers who give them away, and the customers who use them. It is up to all of us to help find the solution. In recent years, many people have started to use reusable bags, such as the 'green bags' you can buy at most supermarkets. Because of these efforts, the number of HDPE bags used in Australia has fallen from around 6 billion in 2002 to 3.92 billion in 2005. However, there is a lot more that can be done. Plastic bag facts * Australians used 3.92 billion plastic shopping bags per year. * Nearly half a million plastic bags are collected on Clean Up Australia Day each year. (source - CUA) * It takes only four grocery shopping trips for an average Australian family to accumulate 60 plastic shopping bags. (source - CUA) * Plastic bags are produced from polymers derived from petroleum. The amount of petroleum used to make a plastic bag would drive a car about 11 metres. (source - CUA) * In 2005, Australians used 192 HDPE bags per capita. (source - Nolan ITU) * 14% of HDPE plastic carry bags are returned to major supermarkets for recycling. (source - ANRA)
  • 83. The Irish Government imposed a 10 cent levy on the use of these bags some years ago and saw the consumption of this product decrease by approximately 90% within a year, a reduction of many billions of plastic bags per year! Once again, I am able as a contemporary visual artist, to use these recycled materials, to create artworks which I hope, express a certain beauty as well as containing their own unique environmental messages. This is my way of making a difference, and at the same time I’m sharing a positive message about beauty that can be gained from the aesthetic experience of appreciating art, as well as giving examples of how we can recycle and reuse in creative ways. These artworks exemplify my commitment as an artist to express contemporary social and environmental concerns.
  • 123. One of the central positions of my work is to create things of beauty. Over the years I have chosen a challenging medium - discarded junk or recycled items - that have mostly been at some time in the process of being transformed by nature. My role has been to transform it further, into a work of art that makes a strong statement while offering a positive aesthetic experience.
  • 124. I get on this razors edge line between fulfilment and frustration, knowing that I am able to only ever provide through my creativity a glimpse of the vastness that is life - a fragment of what is essentially the ineffable. John Dahlsen
  • 145. The Recent Paintings: Sea and Landscapes These paintings were made in 2007 and 2008 as a continued response to my local environment. I remember saying in interviews with the media during the late 90’s, that I hoped that one day I would see less and less litter washing up on our beaches, so that quite naturally my work would find a new direction. This has now happened – on a local level at least. The situation on a global level has worsened considerably. After more than 10 years of collecting beach found objects and subsequently making art out of them, I’ve naturally come now to a new form of expression, which was brought on significantly as a result of the decrease in litter either washing up or being left behind on our beaches, as well as a result of my purge painting series and exploration. Painting the Byron Bay local seascapes and landscapes, mostly images seen by me on my daily walk around the lighthouse and beaches, are painted somewhat with a sense of urgency, due to my ever growing concerns about global warming and its impact. The viewer can see these works have a certain unmistakable mood within each piece, which has been written about by Dr Jacqueline Millner from the University of Western Sydney, seen in the next slide:
  • 146. “This play between abstraction and figuration, between synthetic/organic matter and immateriality in the purge paintings, has been applied in Dahlsen’s most recent works to landscapes — dark works whose subtle references to environmental degradation all but disappear before forcefully catching you unawares. This tension between inorganic abstraction and emotionally charged organism lends these works particular resonance, given their inception in the politics of environmental art. They play out, in elegant and economical aesthetics, the unstable boundaries between the natural and the artificial, reminding us of Wendell Berry’s paradox that ‘the only thing we have to preserve nature with is culture; the only thing we have to preserve wildness with is domesticity” Steven Alderton in his Artspeak column in Australian newspaper, “The Northern Star”, went on to say about the new work: John has been working on a very successful new body of work that extends from his previous enviro sculptures into paintings. They are of the places he has collected detritus for his sculptures. The subject matter also happens to be Byron Bay, a place of infinite beauty and great affection.
  • 181. John Dahlsen John is based in Byron Bay Australia. His artistic training began at the Victorian College of the Arts and then later at the Melbourne College of Advanced Education. He won Australia’s oldest art award, the prestigious Wynne prize, at the AGNSW in 2000 and was again a finalist in 2003 and 2004. In 2006 he was a finalist in the Sulman Award at the Art Gallery of NSW. He has won other significant acquisitive and non-acquisitive art awards, including a mixed media/new media award at the 2003 Florence Biennial. As well as lecturing at various universities and schools from 1980 – 2008, He has been an invited speaker at architectural and environmental symposiums in Australia and Internationally, including at the Australian Embassy in Washington DC, which coincided with an exhibition of his work there in 1999. For 28 years he has had regular solo and group exhibitions in Australia, in both commercial and regional galleries and Internationally, in USA and Europe, where he is also represented in major public and private collections. Galleries represent him in Australia, as well as in New York, Milan, Belgium and Amsterdam. In August 2004, Dahlsen represented Australia at the Athens Olympics of Visual Arts and in October 2004, he became the first Australian artist, (he joins such renowned artists as Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Francesco Clemente and Damien Hirst), to be commissioned by global vodka producer Absolut to create a major public artwork “Absolut Dahlsen” which was unveiled at Sculpture by the Sea in
  • 182. John’s art has been written about in major Australian and International newspapers. His work has been featured in many magazines and in International Art publications. Television includes coverage on all Australian channels and many international programmes. He currently has a major presentation and interview on ABC online. He had a major solo exhibition of his work at the Tweed Regional Art Gallery in February 2005 and his sculpture “Pink Shard” made from fused toughened glass panels with a plastic interlayer bearing image won him another award, at the 2005 Thursday Plantation East Coast Sculpture Show. Later in 2005, he curated as well as participated in an exhibition at the Samuel Dorsky Museum, in New York State in the USA; he also took up an artist in residence position in Jefferson City Missouri, USA in September 2005, where he made a public artwork for their sculpture walk. During June 2006, he had a solo exhibition at parliament house in Sydney. In December 2006, John was awarded the runner up prize in Australia’s newest, and now the richest art award, The Signature of Sydney Art Prize. In late November 2007 John’s work was exhibited in New York State in an exhibition titled “Ecological Integrity / On The Brink” In March 2008 John was an invited guest of the North Stonington Education Foundation, to work with students and to deliver a lecture at Mystic Aquarium and Institute for Exploration Mystic Connecticut USA. John is represented by major public and private collections across Australia, he is also in many International collections in Europe, USA and Japan.
  • 183. John was awarded in 2009, the Swell Sculpture Exhibition "Environmental Art Award", Currumbin, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia. He went on to win this prize again in September 2010.In July 2010, he won the Peoples Choice Award in the ArtsCape Biennial Sculpture Exhibition. Byron Bay, NSW Australia for his 6m x 4m x 3m sculpture: “Monumental Environmental Artwork” which he made from a recycled Camphor Laurel tree root ball and trunk. In September 2010 John's work featured at the famed "Hanmo Gallery" in Beijing's 798 contemporary art district in China. March 2011 saw John being commissioned by the Commonwealth Bank to create a major sculpture for their new HQ, from objects collected from the annual Clean up Australia campaign in Sydney. John was appointed " Cultural Ambassador" for Friends of the United Nations, on He was invited in 2012 by the United Nations to write an essay for the Rio+20 conference. Dahlsen’s essay, titled “The Future we want” appears on the UN website for the Rio+20 conference. And can be seen here: http://www.un.org/en/sustainablefuture/dahlsen.shtml In 2013 John was offered a Doctorate of Philosophy (PhD Candidature) at the Charles Darwin University N.T. Australia.