Fantastic Forms

Colourful, abundant and brimming with shapes that sway, teeter and slump, Fantastic Forms celebrated the endless creativity of the human imagination through drawing, ceramics, sculpture and animation.

Fantastic Forms

Colourful, abundant and brimming with shapes that sway, teeter and slump, Fantastic Forms celebrated the endless creativity of the human imagination through drawing, ceramics, sculpture and animation.

Exhibition

1 April - 18 June 2023

The starting point for Fantastic Forms was the expansive selection of multi-hued drawings and curvilinear ceramics by Merric Boyd, collected by his son, Arthur Boyd, which form a cornerstone of the Bundanon Collection. Bringing this lyrical work into conversation with the very different practices of three living Australian artists, The starting point for  explored the joy of artmaking and its connection to everyday life.

The exhibition featured over 200 works from the Bundanon Collection in dialogue with new large-scale sculptures by Nabilah Nordin, a series of ceramic figures by Stephen Benwell and stop-motion videos by emerging Bundjalung artist Rubyrose Bancroft. Beginning with Merric Boyd’s idiosyncratic approach to artmaking, Fantastic Forms expanded from well-known ceramic work into his energetic and playful drawing practice, all of which was underpinned by the spiritual philosophy of love and connection that ran through his life and work.


Exhibiting Artists

Considered Australia’s first studio potter, Merric Boyd began working with clay in 1910 when the medium was not widely used. Alongside pottery, drawing formed the backbone of his practice from an early age. Boyd’s creative philosophy shaped the lives of his five children, Lucy, Arthur, Guy, David and Mary, all of whom became artists in their own rights.

Nabilah Nordin is a Singaporean/Australian sculptor whose practice ‘unlearns’ correct methods and techniques to maintain a state of conscious naïveté. Interested in material invention, her installations embrace wonky craftwork, playfully celebrating the visceral and anthropomorphic qualities of materials in concert with community engaged performative practices.

In his paintings, ceramics and bronzes, Stephen Benwell both references and challenges classical forms, presenting fragments of full statues, suggestive of archaeological finds, alongside busts and statues of the male nude. Benwell’s distinct style continues his contemporary perspective on traditions of beauty, and other art-historical influences.

Rubyrose Bancroft is an emerging Bundjalung artist based in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales. Bancroft is a trained ceramist who began experimenting with plasticine claymation at home during lockdown. Her work in fantastic forms uses humour and escapism whilst exploring biblical and cosmic themes.


Dates & Times

1 April — 18 June 2023

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Bundanon acknowledges the people of the Dharawal and Dhurga language groups as the Traditional Owners of the land within our boundaries, and recognises their continuous connection to culture, community and Country.

This website contains names, images and voices of deceased Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

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