Bec Dean’s Top Five Artists to Watch in 2012

If you've ever marvelled at one of Carriageworks' stranger corners, you'll dig these five emerging artists.

Zoe Ferguson
Published on August 13, 2012

Bec Dean is co-director of Performance Space, one of Australia's leading development and presentation organisations for interdisciplinary arts. If you've ever marvelled at one of Carriageworks' stranger corners, you've seen their work.

More than most, Bec spends her days seeking out the inventions, interjections and experiences that give colour to our lives. These are the five emerging artists she encourages us to keep a particular eye on.

Michaela Gleave

Jeff Khan (my co-director) and I just worked with Michaela Gleave on Our Frozen Moment, which was an installation of rain and light inside the gallery space here at Carriageworks. Michaela makes exquisitely beautiful, experiential work, but she undertakes her own fabrication of the complex system of pumps, pipes and reticulation required to make it rain on the inside. She also has an explosives license. She is true DIY.

Eric Bridgeman

Eric Bridgeman is a young artist from Brisbane, now working in Liverpool in the UK. We hope he may be back for our program SEXES in October. Eric head-on tackles issues that tend to simmer in our culture, from racism, to sexism, to homophobia…especially in sporting culture. He makes photos, performances and paintings that make everyone uncomfortable, and so they should be!

James Brown

James Brown is a composer and musician who has worked on many projects for Performance Space and PACT artists over the years. He is an artist that often gets credited as a part of new works but I think more and more that he should be the headline act. He is a brilliant and somewhat humble collaborator.

Cigdem Aydemir

Cigdem Aydemir is a photographer, performer and installation artist making difficult work that examines gendered and religious identity in Australia, and engages with certain right-wing attitudes about Muslim women and the burqa as a potential terrorist threat. We are hoping to commission a large-scale work by her later this year.

Applespiel

Applespiel is a collaborative team of eight young performers who premiered a new work with us at SHOW ON. It was a live rockumentary/rock concert called Applespiel Make a Band and Take on the Recording Industry. It’s pretty much what it says on the label, and they can write and play music too. I’ve never seen such a large group work together so harmoniously before. I expect way more shouting and discontent. It’s like they’ve all taken ego-supressing drugs…to make a performance that is all about an industry that thrives on fame, stardom and ego-mania.

Published on August 13, 2012 by Zoe Ferguson
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