Friday, 22 December 2017

Driven

Driven
Artists are basically driven to create





2 Dogs Art Space Akashi
 Presents
The
Driven
exhibition
by
Western Australian Artists

Opens 13th of January to the 23rd by appointment
Gallery Opening times1 - 4 pm Saturday and Sunday

on these days 13th  – 14th  – 21st of January, 20th 1.30 – 4pm





Lynne Norton - Caspar Fairhall -  Diokno Pasalin - Michael Doherty - Shelley Cowper -  Peter Davidson - Cynthia Ellis - Connie Petrillo
 Melissa Nolan McDougal  - Sally Douglas - Ron Nyizstor
Michelle Bourne - Kevin Robertson
John Cullinaine - Duncan Mckay - Ken Wadrop





I don’t know of any other living thing on this planet that is driven to make art wholly without reward other than humans but I might be wrong.

It is true animals can make something called art but is it a natural progression or a pavlovian series of taught tricks like dogs can do for a reward being food or affection from the master?

Whereas humans are a unique species in creating art as it appears to have been a form of communication since early rock drawings in Australia and the cave paintings in Europe, some of these images have meanings that modern societies may never know about but they were obviously important at the time for communicating ideas for the societal memory for the local inhabitants

So now back to the present time and in his exhibition there is on show artists who create art with a diverse range of studio praxis that have one obvious thing in common and that is they appear driven to construct artwork in unity and diversity.

The Driven exhibition produces one of the most interesting outcomes in humanity being how the self - motivated human mind, obsessed to create presents an artwork uniquely different from the next human.

Therefore in viewing this exhibition one hopes the audience can appreciate the determination of the artists in studio praxis with the associated aesthetic outcomes produced, whether they’re to your aesthetic taste does not matter, what matters is the artist’s drive in a range of experimentations that have managed to create a unique artwork.

Dr Peter Davidson

Acknowledgments

Interview with one of Lucian Freud’s children where she talked about what her father said about in art ‘it’s what drives you’ this stayed with me for a long time and unfortunately it was a long time ago and I can’t find site on the internet anymore.

Why Do Humans Make Art

Nathan H. Lents, Ph.D., is a Professor of molecular biology at John Jay College, of the City University of New York, where he also serves as the director of the honors program and the Macaulay Honors College. He is the author of Not So Different: Finding Human Nature in Animals and maintains The Human Evolution Blog.