Appears inVisual Art and Paintings

Robert Boynes

The great divide/ in place and time

1997, synthetic polymer paint on two canvases

Born in Adelaide, Robert Boynes moved to Canberra in 1978 to take up the position of Head of Painting at the ANU School of Art, a position he retired from in 2007 to concentrate on his studio practice.

Since the mid-1960s Boynes has held over thirty solo shows, including major survey exhibitions at the Nolan Gallery (1995) and the Canberra Museum and Gallery (2005). He has participated in numerous important group exhibitions including Australian Perspecta (Art Gallery of New South Wales, 1981), Field to figuration (National Gallery of Victoria, 1987), Fieldwork: Australian art 1968 – 2002 (National Gallery of Victoria, 2002), Tales of the unexpected (National Gallery of Australia, 2002), and the Clemenger Art Prize (National Gallery of Victoria, 2003). Boynes has received many awards during his career, the most recent being commissions for the Federal Court of Australia, the ACT Legislative Assembly and the RAAF Memorial, all in Canberra. His work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, most state galleries, and many regional, institutional, corporate and private collections here and overseas.

The great divide/ in place and time is characteristic of the artist’s work of the late 1990s in a number of ways. It is a multi-layered and powerful image. The pictorial base is a media still of a confrontation in a (unnamed) legislature. The image is screened onto the canvas and then paint is applied and removed in a variety of phases to produce the desired effect Boynes gives his viewers a high vantage point so that we look down on the fracas. In doing this he forces us to participate, to take on critical and political positions. Viewers must attempt to grasp the contemporary world and its contradictions.

The artist offers ways of reorganising the structures and relations of that world through the act of painting and the products of those acts.

As much as Boynes is questioning our society, he is also questioning how we see, perceptually and imaginatively, and how memory impacts on all this. He also raises questions about the status of images and the role of painting; although these questions may remain unanswered, this work is a very strong voice for the sustaining power of painting in the contemporary world.

Dimensions

121 x 232 cm

Object number

1998.3.1

Categories

Visual Art

Credit

Purchased 1998