By Ruth Skilbeck
WANTED! Art Empress Seeking Empire Builder of Distinction.
IN the reflexive Empire of Signs that is produced
in the intersection of contemporary art,
media and commerce, anyone can build their own empire by purchasing a piece of art that is
symbolically reflexive of the values of the commoditized art world .
That is the subliminal symbolic equation of
symbolic value that has seen the value of contemporary art translating into
astronomical prices with new generations of global art collectors, keen to
display that their taste matches the numbers in their hedge funds, or “just for
the love of it”, have bought art that reflects the media values of the times.
All of these meanings are effectively, to
this critic, displayed and played with ironically in the work by Deborah Kelly
appositely titled Empress. The work upturns the patriarchal order by depicting
King Kong’s former female victim as dominant Empress. Of course this also
raises the question of women artists’ erotic female representation that has exercised feminist debate since the 70s, is it empowering or does it play into
male fantasies? We’ll leave that one open, for now.
Right now, it’s the context of this work as
the latest donation to the Cementa Pozible campaign that’s of most interest.
It may seem particularly appropriate that it
is this work that has emerged as the potential savior of the Cementa
Contemporary Art Festival Pozible Campaign, and at the very last minute. As more than one art commentator and critic has been
heard to whisper of their shift into online virtual arts websites as a move to
building their “online media empires”...
And now the Empress appears! Replete in
symbolic splendor, sexy, semi naked, surrounded by sky scraping Empire of erotic
Signs: hallucinatory phallic symbols vibrating in the epicenter of western
capital values, where she upturns the legend of King Kong, and in the guise of
his former female victim, grasps the monster in her hand and renders her foe
helpless!
As if in fulfillment of collective dreams
for a powerful female savior, the Empress has appeared with only hours to go
before the close of the campaign. Several
thousand dollars more are needed to reach the target of the Cementa
Contemporary Arts festival, to provide the means to “buy an artist a bed” for
the nights of the festival in the rural post cement works town in rural New
South Wales.
One of a new generation of Australia’s
prominent contemporary women artists, Deborah Kelly has at the last minute
donated her striking work, to the Pozible campaign.
Will the Empress save the day? As we go to
post, there are less than 15 hours to go. We await the outcome of this latest intervention
with interest and shall keep readers posted.
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| Deborah Kelly "Empress" (2005-08) 5 ed. of 5 signed pigment print on Hahnemvelle cotton archival paper |

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