| SLIM BARRIE EVERY WORK A MASTERPIECE Curator: Peter Fay EXHIBITION DATES 4 - 13 DECEMBER 2003. |
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Over the next three years Fay curated several solo shows in Sydney, Canberra and Wellington, NZ. Slim was both a feature artist and opening performer for the National Gallery of Australia exhibition Home Sweet Home: Works from the Peter Fay Collection (in Canberra until 18 January 2004 and then travelling). Many of his works in these exhibitions have autobiographical references, depicting the musicians and band members from his singing career and, most poignantly, commemorating his mother's life. Slim's early boats, a response to the excitement of moving from the inland to the coast and seeing the sea for the first time, were made to float, but became 'masterworks' for exhibition. These fantastically painted boats are then decorated with figures, trinkets and memorabilia. While Slim has always worked in a range of media (including pokerwork and carved ostrich eggs) and themes (also his observations on birds and bush), his free-standing piled-up cardboard assemblages are totemic, a response to the material. Assemblage remains the consistent feature of all his works whether decorative or minimal, figurative or non-figurative. These days Slim calls each work a masterpiece. Through these works Slim tells the
story of his creativity and transforms the forms and structures of
objects and paintings into his own autobiography.
Of his own thoughts on Barrie, Fay says 'What I saw in Slim was a man
whose life contains one thing and that's art. There's nothing else.'.
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