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Filtering by: Christopher Zanko

Christopher Zanko | Stranger Avenue
Nov
6
to Nov 30

Christopher Zanko | Stranger Avenue

Christopher Zanko uses a visual pattern language to make bold abstractions of residential architecture. His carved and painted surfaces echo the veneers applied to mid-century modern homes. With increasingly systemised techniques and larger formats, Zanko works with a range of tools to develop highly nuanced textures. In the latest work he is making complex choices about how to render depth in relief style. There are now also uncarved painted areas, the grey of a rendered wall, for instance, that further crop and contain the images. Pathways in the foreground cut through the composition in parallel to the high contrast shadows cast onto the houses.

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An Exhibition
May
1
to May 25

An Exhibition

We are proud to introduce a group exhibition with E&D family and friends:
Lynda Draper, Ebony Eden, Julia Flanagan, Anita Holloway, Rob Howe, India Mark, Mish Meijers, Montana Miller, Hal Pratt, Nick Santoro, Henry Jock Walker, Leonie Watson, Christopher Zanko 
Opening night 3rd May, 6-8pm.
Click here for exhibition catalogue

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The Castle | Rob Howe, Frank Nowlan & Christopher Zanko
May
10
to Jun 3

The Castle | Rob Howe, Frank Nowlan & Christopher Zanko

Shelter is one of those core needs along with air, food, water and clothing. But the house seeks to fulfil other functions: security, belonging, esteem and self-actualisation. In The Castle, three artists from different generations explore divergent ideas of home. Frank Nowlan uses it as a base for vernacular observation and deadpan characterisation. Rob Howe places the house within the streetscape, painting the overlap between light, cast shadow and gestural geometries. Christopher Zanko pares back and records housing types as markers of urban change. The Castle is an opportunity to view three significantly different painters initiating a conversation around ideas of home.

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Christopher Zanko | Umbra
Nov
9
to Dec 3

Christopher Zanko | Umbra

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Umbra is the darkest part of a shadow, specifically the area of the earth or moon experiencing the total phase of an eclipse. In his paintings of suburban homes, the umbra Christopher Zanko employs is dragged like a sundial across the surface, an abstraction that pierces the formal character and messes with the legibility of the image. By carving and chiseling line and pattern, Zanko nods to the production qualities of the print – the play with negative and positive space and the dynamic between thick line and planar shapes. The printmaking quality suggests the multiple, much as the buildings selected are houses of a type, reproduced with variation across suburbs.

The drafted line, textured mark and dramatic shadow are synthesised into a language that suggests the architectural rendering of the mid-century modern.  However Zanko is observing these buildings decades later with his work noting the layers of redesign that have occurred over time – a new ramp or driveway, the historical plantings that buffer the hard edges of these structures.

An initial drafted drawing is made on the MDF surface. Then there is the introduction of tools that carve into this surface, responding to the textured veneers of these homes. This literal carving out of the structure brings qualities of process work and time to Zanko's subjects. He has selected these buildings for their formal qualities and their persistent presence. They are sculptural entities in the landscape, vulnerable to changing circumstance and to future augmentation or demolition. To carve is to set an image down with a level of density that ensures permanence, whether the existing structure remains or is destroyed.

By reproducing these buildings as paintings, Zanko converts them from their function to an architectural representation. The form of these houses historically communicated the cultural taste and wealth of the resident. The shadows cast across their facades suggest an encroachment of unconscious forces that interrupt this social communication. In Against Architecture, writer Denis Hollier states that "architecture is society's authorized superego" (1). Zanko understands this, presenting his response to these signs in an extension of the pop tradition that both celebrates the formal vocabulary of modernism and digs into the psychology of it. By introducing the shadow across these pop images, an unconscious opposite emerges, suggesting psychological states which are hidden from view and literally behind drawn curtains.

Zanko graduated with a Bachelor of Creative Arts, Wollongong University with Distinction in Painting (BCA). He was a finalist in the Lloyd Rees Memorial Youth Art Award and winner of the Gongcrete Art Prize. He has shown in numerous group exhibitions including at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery and Project Contemporary Art Space, Wollongong. This is his first solo show at The Egg & Dart.

 (1) Denis Hollier, Against Architecture, trans. Betsy Wing (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1989), pp.22–23.

-Melody Willis

 

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The Egg & Dart Family and Friends Exhibition
Jul
21
to Aug 6

The Egg & Dart Family and Friends Exhibition

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A group exhibition featuring recent works by The Egg & Dart's stable artists and friends... Artists included are:

Lynda Draper, Julia Flanagan, Rob Howe, India Mark, Frank Nowlan, Paul Ryan, Nick Santoro and Chris Zanko.

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The Egg & Dart Xmas Show 2016
Dec
3
to Dec 25

The Egg & Dart Xmas Show 2016

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Egg & Dart on Excursion
Oct
16
to Dec 6

Egg & Dart on Excursion

We are very excited to announce that The Egg & Dart has been invited to exhibit at Casula Power House, Sydney this October-December.

We have invited our own stable of artists as well as three Scandinavian artists:

Gabrielle Adamik, Lee Bethel, Aaron Fell-Fracasso, India Mark, Frank Nowlan, Nick Santoro, Leonie Watson, Christopher Zanko, Marie J. Engelsvold (DK), Sofi Lardner Häggström (SWE), and Rebecka Bebben Andersson (SWE)

Have a look at Casula Power House here: http://www.casulapowerhouse.com/

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