Friday, 23 February 2024

Hicks

 


This is a super large serve of ice cream scoops. There’s mint choc chip at the pinnacle, then rum and raisin scoops, blueberry gelato, honeycomb crunch, lime pistachio. The mind adjusts to the sight of so much ice cream beginning to melt and sag. Or else it’s bean bags. In muted pastel colours, it will be observed, not the classic bean bag hot pink or bright orange leather. Visitors could choose their own bag for the day, except signs say do not touch. Then again, the scoops could be boulders and actually the wall caption says they’re boulders. The gallery is clear that the sculptor Sheila Hicks (American, born 1934, though like half of them lives most of the time in Paris) says they’re boulders. Rather too comfortable saggy boulders, it could be said, with soft shoulders. The caption, black print on a white rectangle just below eye level, talks art talk suitable for art talkers. Such things as Hicks being unconventional and someone who understands gestural form and painterly reference. And it’s true. The boulders resemble the close attention to form achieved by Pierre Bonnard as he dobs tiniest blobs of teensiest hairbrush finesse to make a vase or dog in one of his panoramic works, of the kind seen in the very same gallery space only last year. It reminds me of the Bendigo wool shop, the one at the Woollen Mill, with its bargain room of chunky twist and lengthy merino and alpaca balls by the scoopful up to the ceiling. Oddly, no one entering the gallery space looks at the pinnacle of woolly clouds ascending on high. I watch as they glance quickly then skirt it, refuse to eyeball, walk around the fact, going quickly over instead to inspect the Indigenous ink paintings on the facing walls. I conclude that the pinnacle spectacle is hard to engage with. Perhaps they have a guilty conscience about so much unused wool in one place. Or panic attack memories of knitting bees in youth. I don’t ask. Then again, it could be airport luggage left in the rain, in the days before they invented carousels. Or else it really is the mountain of purgatory, is my next thought. How much ice cream have you eaten in your life? And was it enough? Or much too much? Who told you to write outside the margins? And what really happened at the knitting bee, anyway? Perhaps purgatory is an acrylic thick ply wool profiterole mountain. Does it have a purpose? It’s a purgatory almost impossible to scale. Sheila Hicks, for reasons best known to herself, calls the boulders ‘Nowhere to Go’, but they could well be called ‘Nowhere to Sleep’. So soft, but so steep. The kids’ caption talks of thinking about wool, when what they would want to do is jump head first into a hundred bean bags at once. That would be a Happening, mayhem at ground level, but the mountain refuses such rest and recreation, with conventional signs instructing everyone do not touch the exhibit.

No comments:

Post a Comment