‘TIFF #2 ‘ will be featured as part of the Brisbane contingency of the art prize’s exhibitions, which are mounted in Sydney and Brisbane as well as online. See exhibition details below:
The Lethbridge 2000 27 June – 6 July 2019 7/11 Wambool Street, Bulimba QLD
Artists working from their imagination tend to wrestle with ideas and feelings located on a subconscious level. Consequently, Imagined (2019) is an exhibition that explores the work of fifteen artists’ who create work from their imaginings. Interspersed with varying subject matters, each artist plumbs the depths of their imagination as well as providing a glimpse into their creative trajectory. Overall, the exhibited works cast a curious eye on our world providing viewers with new perspectives. – Contemporary Art Awards
The Contemporary Arts Awards present ‘Imagined’ When: 2 June – 30th June Where: Available to view here.
‘Himeros’ (detail), 2013, Mixed media on watercolour paper, 51 x 50cm
Exhibiting artists: Tom Christophersen, Michael Dyson, Paul Hagan, Hugh Kerr, Daniel Kneebone, Guillermo Jackson, Susannah Paterson, Beatrice Prost, Ruby Purple, Geoffrey Rose, HelenShadforth, Michael Simms, Lauri Smith, Paris Tremayne and Michelle Webb.
Opening in May, Tom’s portrait ‘Dear Daphne’ will be exhibited as part of Beautiful Bizarre’s group exhibition ‘Gaia Reborn: A Future Utopia’, at URBAN NATION in Berlin, Germany on the 11 May, 2019. You can read more about the exhibition below:
After curating seven exhibitions in Australia, Japan, and the USA, I am thrilled beyond words to be working with Yasha Young, Executive Director of the Urban Nation Museum of Urban Art in Berlin, to bring you something truly special. This exhibition will include the work of over 50 of the world’s best contemporary figurative artists, working across genres and mediums, whom will individually and collectively bring to life an incredibly important theme – the conservation of our planet. We are currently living through a new mass extinction event the ‘Holocene extinction’, which tragically is entirely due to humanity’s affect on the earth and environment. The exhibition’s theme Gaia Reborn: A Future Utopia aims to inspire society to once again see, appreciate, and care for the natural world. The time for change is now – before it is too late!
I am so honoured that my portrait of Michael Simms, ‘Purge.EXE’ has been selected as a finalist in the 2019 Contemporary Art Awards, based in Brisbane, Australia. An online exhibition of the finalists will run from 11th Jan. – 11th June which you can check out here: https://www.contemporaryartawards.com/
Overall, the online 2019 Finalist Exhibition showcases diverse mediums and subject matters providing a snapshot of contemporary art from emerging artists.
Tom’s latest work ‘Stick Shift’ will be available for purchase at the final exhibition at Stanley Street Gallery for 2018. From the Stanley Street Gallery website:
A Time of Gifts – The Art of Giving
5th December – 22nd December 2018
Stanley Street Gallery’s annual group exhibition features unique and timeless works of art, perfect for the time of giving. The ART of GIVING is an invitation to collectors and lovers of art to discover unique gifts for the special people in our lives or to reward yourself at Christmas time.
“Portraiture and performance artist Tom Christophersen knows the two disciplines go hand in hand. His portraits are a performance and he takes this truth to another level by more often than not working with performance artists as subjects. Christophersen grew up in Adelaide and is now based in Sydney, Australia. He is a theatre maker, performer, visual artist, facilitator, designer and illustrator, who likes “Twin Peaks, The Pixies and dark streaks” and is inspired by everything from succulent gardens to the Jonestown Massacre.
His works are a mixture of the macabre and the joyful that catch the more bizarre sides of his subjects. Christophersen’s cheeky and dark sense of humour, along with his politics, is evident in his compositions. Layered with symbols and meaning, he takes the great tradition of portrait as person, not simply a face and body, into the modern age using technology and millennial iconography in surprising and challenging ways.” – Freddy Grant
The internet is obsessive; an intermedial space of creation, connection, formation, aggravation, pleasure, pain, remembrance, reiteration and discovery. Stanley Street represented artist Tom Christophersen and his internet-acquaintance-cum-collaborator Michael Simms are both a product of and a testament to the expressive, compulsive and collaborative artistic potential of digital friendships.
An unseen aspect of a garment’s structure, interfacing is integral for moulding, strengthening and stiffening, giving the appearance of cohesion. From a computational perspective, the interface is the gateway to communication and the sharing of information. Cleverly taking into account these definitions and their respective contexts, the artists put forward the idea that a cohesive self is comprised of both digital and non-digital counterparts. Using selected figures from both of their own online connections, the artists explore the functionality of digital space and social media in their suite of paintings and drawings. Stylised realism both documents and imagines an intangible and ever-changing self-perception, often looking through physical and imagined screens to illustrate this notion.
Photography by Michael Simms
Christophersen and Simms’ collaborative long-form music-video-esque work builds upon these ideas in an engaging and tangible way, glitching between their faces and building a complex, aggravated and pixelated half-human. A strong sense of anxiety and the compartmentalised self is present here, with both artists conveying their respective insecurities – Simms exuding cords and reels of a tape and Christophersen becoming distantly entranced by his own pop-mantra.
‘INTERFACING’ is an explosive, collaborative figurative exhibition between two of Australia’s most exciting emerging visual artists. Tom Christophersen and Michael Simms present ‘INTERFACING’, an exploration into our flawed and often pixelated representations of ourselves. In an age of digital expression, ‘INTERFACING’ prises apart notions of dangerous self-representation and distorted identities via technology.
Following the success of 2017’s season, Rapid Reads is back at the Old 505. The festival will showcase the newest work from Australia’s most contemporary emerging playwrights, who will be paired with and mentored by some of our best established writers.
This year, Rapid Reads includes a series of panels, discussions and networking nights for a two-week joyride of new work including…
Photography by Philip Erbacher
what’s going on? it’s “håmlet” a new australian play. a half baked reading for free at Old 505 – Rapid Reads – 830 pm. @apocalypsetheatrecompany @_tomopoly 📷 @fleshskinhairblood #loveshakespeare
Saturday 14 April
8.30PM – ANTOINETTE BARBOUTTIS & TOM CHRISTOPHERSEN – HAMLET – A NEW AUSTRALIAN PLAY