Continuing an ambitious program of bringing critical thinking and innovation into the galleries of MUMA, Shapes of Knowledge brings together eight projects from artists, collectives and organisations from across the globe.
This is a compelling exhibition of big ideas – reflecting on how we live, how we learn, and the unique ability of art to animate our sensory experiences and critical faculties.
The first exhibition of its kind in Australia, Shapes of Knowledge opens at MUMA Saturday 9 February – Saturday 13 April 2019 and has been curated by MUMA’s Senior Curator, Hannah Mathews.
The exhibition reflects on the different platforms, spaces and timeframes in which knowledge is produced and shared. These projects include A Centre for Everything (AUS), Asia Art Archive (HK), Chimurenga (SA), Lucas Ihlein (AUS), Annette Krauss (NLD), Alex Martinis Roe (AUS), Kym Maxwell (AUS), and The Mulka Project (AUS).
A Centre for Everything, Group 14 – Rituals, Roast and Human Fussball 2014. Image courtesy of the artists
‘One of the most powerful things about art is the multiplicity of knowledges it leads us to. Whether it be the materials and techniques of the studio, the histories – contested, real and imagined – of people and places, the politics of culture, technology and economics, art and artists invariably introduce us to knowledge that spans perspectives, disciplines and time. This knowledge may be new to us. The accumulation might challenge what is already familiar, renew something of our past or revise something for our future.’, says Hannah Mathews
‘Shapes of Knowledge’, she continues ‘considers not only how art can impact knowledge but how art itself – its forms, meaning and audiences – can be transformed by learning. It acknowledges the myriad ways in which art and its makers challenge the conventions of knowledge towards new means, towards new acts of knowing.’
Annette Krauss, Site for Unlearning (Art Organization) 2015. Image courtesy of the artist
The exhibition focuses on the role that artists play in relation to knowledge, taking up notions of research, of the laboratory, of learning and of teaching as its central concerns.
The eight projects in Shapes of Knowledge range from an ice cream machine making coal-flavoured treats, live radio broadcasts, a cinema of Indigenous culture, test sites for future greening technology, a toolkit for feminist action, and performance lectures.
Each project will be activated at various times throughout the exhibition – including bus visits to regenerative farms, morning stretch classes for Monash staff, weekend DIY workshops, a salon of feminist performances, amongst others. These programs are free and open to the public.
The projects include:
MUMA will undertake an intensive workshop with Dutch-based artist Annette Krauss and her Site for Unlearning (Art Organisation) program: an ongoing, collaborative research project for unlearning specific organisational habits, behaviours and ways of thinking. It takes the art organisation as a concrete site for research and subject for change, while placing emphasis on unlearning as a strategy integral to learning something new. The results of MUMA’s ‘unlearning’ will be displayed as part of the exhibition.
Conceived by artist-educator Kym Maxwell, Objects of Longing is a multi-disciplinary project that engages students at Dandenong Primary School in an extended investigation into the relationships between play (personal collecting) and cultural production (institutional collections). The resulting work is a live theatre piece performed by the students at MUMA on Saturday 23 February 2019.
The Mulka Project is a digital library and production centre located in Yirrkala in north-east Arnhem Land. It exists as part of the community’s art centre Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre, facilitating the production of audio-visual material and new-media artwork, along with repatriating valuable artworks, texts, images, sounds and videos of Yolngu culture that are stored in museums, art galleries, libraries and universities in Australia and around the world. The artists will be in Melbourne to discuss this unique program.
Asia Art Archive (AAA) asks: how do the activities of art schools impact the history of art? AAA will present an exhibition display and series of lectures and workshops that draw on their recent research into the pedagogical models used by art schools throughout Asia, in particular the schools of Bigakkō in Japan, Baroda in India, and Zhejian in China.
An initiative of the Cape Town-based collective, Chimurenga, the Pan African Space Station is a live radio studio and innovative platform for free ideas and political reflection about Africa by Africans. It will broadcast live from MUMA from 11-13 April 2019.
MUMA, Monash University Museum, Ground Floor, Building F, Monash University, Caulfield Campus, 900 Dandenong Road, Caulfield East. Entry Free. Tuesday-Friday, 10am – 5pm; Saturday 12-5pm monash.edu/muma/