MARS Melbourne Art Rooms

[MARS] Gallery, Australia

[MARS] Melbourne Art Rooms is a contemporary commercial art gallery in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. MARS specialises in exhibiting, promoting and building the careers of contemporary Australian and International artists.

History

[MARS] was established by gallerist Andy Dinan in 2004, who converted a former dairy in Port Melbourne into a two-level contemporary gallery. In 2014, [MARS] relocated to a new purpose-built gallery at 7 James St, Windsor, (in the City of Stonnington).[1] [2]

Since its opening in 2004, [MARS] has staged more than 220 exhibitions and showed more than 330 artists. The gallery has participated in a number of art fairs, including Art Fair Tokyo, Art Fair Korea, Melbourne Art Fair and Sydney Contemporary.

[MARS] is a member of ACGA, the leading national body and collective voice representing commercial art galleries in Australia.[3]

Building

The new [MARS] at Windsor was designed by Chris Manton of Jam Architects. The three-level space incorporates amenities for showing new media such as sound sculpture, video and light art. The gallery has four distinct exhibition spaces, including a custom black-box gallery committed to the exhibition of contemporary video art, a light-box room for the display of light and sound works, as well as a drawing room to exhibit works on paper.[4]

[MARS] is committed to environmental sustainability, and the gallery features a number of environmental design elements including recycled timber floors, and rainwater collection and harvesting.[5]

Artists

[MARS] represents more than 20 contemporary artists including Daniel Agdag, Jo Bertini, Domenico de Clario, Wanda Gillespie, Stephen Haley, Sophia Hewson, Julie Irving, Anne Judell, Megan Keating, Bronek Kozka, Nick Mourtzakis, Josh Muir, Hitesh Natalwala, Saffron Newey, Simon Pericich, Diego Ramirez, Anna Louise Richardson, Bill Sampson, Jason Sims, Brie Trennery, Samuel Tupou, Tricky Walsh, Meg Williams and Jud Wimhurst.

Public Art & Rent Art

In addition to a regular exhibition program, [MARS] offers a public art consultancy and works alongside artists, property developers, architects and local councils to implement Public Art projects throughout Melbourne. Some of the public art commissions curated by [MARS] are featured on the following buildings in Melbourne: 50 Albert Rd, Albert Park with artists Emma Davies,Jeremy Kibel and Dr James Hullick, Eden and Haven residential developments with artwork by artists Priscilla Bracks, Daniel Agdag and Alexis Beckett; Smith Street Collingwood (The Smith Street Portrait Project by photographer Jacqueline Mitelman) Domenico De Clario Project – installations by David Burrows ; Footscray Plaza redevelopment featuring a 240-square-metre artwork by Melbourne Artist Matthew Harding on the façade of No.18 Albert; Port Melbourne and Melbourne CBD.[2][6][7][8]

[MARS] also offers a rental art program, which seeks to support contemporary artists, through the acquisition and placement of artworks in private and public spaces.

References

  1. Lucinda Schmidt “Are Melbourne's commercial galleries becoming an endangered species?“, ‘’The Age’’, Retrieved 1 February 2015
  2. 1 2 Art Guide Australia (18 December 2013) "Good times, bad times", ‘’Art Guide Australia’’, Retrieved 3 February 2015
  3. “ACGA Member Galleries”, Retrieved 1 February 2015
  4. Laura Thomson (2014) "A conversation with Andy Dinan", ‘’Ocula’’, Retrieved 5 February 2015
  5. "Designwall: Mars Gallery Melbourne" Retrieved 25 March 2015
  6. (2014) "Traveller | Andy Dinan", The Australian Financial Review, Retrieved 5 February 2015
  7. (20 November 2013) "MARS Gallery Leading Public Art Commissions", ‘’Art Collector’’, Retrieved 5 February 2015
  8. Benjamin Millar (1 October 2014) "Footscray Plaza reopening: More in store", Maribrynong & Hobsons Bay Star Weekly, Retrieved 5 February 2015

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.