Double Yolker!
These are not things you will ever see.
Meijers is constructing images and objects that merge politics with theatre (as if that needs to be consciously done). She is allowing us an audience with everything that exists behind closed doors, and she is putting a spotlight on it, and as it stands, sweaty and blinking out at the darkness and forgetting its lines, she is sticking the knife in, and playing for the dramatic finale.
These are images and objects that we are familiar with. Sort of. They are gatherings of people, or images or totems that stand in for those people. Are they at a protest or a bus stop or at the theatre? They are full of the energy of the possible, and they are terrible with their intimacy – do we know these people? Why do they move with such overstated gestures? It’s a kind of dance, and a kind of ritual, and it’s obviously symbolic but what’s with the ghosts and the snowmen?
Are they the possibilities that have ended, or the ones that have frozen in time – the memories we have or the misconceptions we carry in life, hovering behind us persistently. They inhabit these ephemeral dreamscapes – reminders of the choices we have and have not made, the things that haunt us that never quite go away – they are part of our cast after all; the things that make up our own personal theatre, even if they take up the smallest of non-speaking roles.
In the gallery, we are confronted by large paintings that feel like sets. We stand in front of them and we are not sure if we are the players or the played. Open a newspaper at the moment and we’re still not sure. These works allow us to disappear into the between state, where what is happening might not actually be. Somewhere stage left there is a greek chorus letting us know the truth of the situation, but we can’t quite make out the words; the music has drowned them out.
Double yolker! It is the surprise of the unexpected. It’s walking around a familiar street corner and finding unfamiliar terrain, In this gallery it is a cacophony of paintings, ceramics and video work that seduce us with their palettes and their compositions while alluding to the state of the world that we inhabit. It’s a seductive voice though; we want to listen, we’re itching to be moved.
Tricky Walsh 2018
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Mish Meijers, Above and below the line, 2018
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Mish MeijersSentinel 1, 2018acrylic, oil, oil pastel on wood240 x 120 cmAU$ 4,200.00
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Mish MeijersSentinel 2, 2018acrylic, oil, oil pastel on wood240 x 120 cmAU$ 4,200.00
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Mish MeijersSentinel 3, 2018acrylic, oil, oil pastel on wood240 x 120 cmAU$ 4,200.00
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: The dramatic conclusion, 2018oil on acrylic sheet101 x 110 cmSold
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: Parliamentarian Wrestlemania, 2018oil on glass75cm x 95cmSold
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: Night caucus, 2018oil on glass62.5 x 90 cmSold
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: After party for the sponsors, 2018oil on glass62.5 x 90 cmSold
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: Question time, 2018oil on glass62.5 x 90 cmSold
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Mish Meijers, Impossible Opera: Pull me, push you, 2018
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Mish MeijersImpossible Opera: Dress rehearsal around the fountain, 2018oil on glass50.5 x 69 cmSold
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Mish MeijersOH SHIT! Please don't go, 2018single channel video, 3 min 55 secEdition of 5 plus 2 artist's proofsAU$ 1,200.00
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 1; nosy guy, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics25 x 21 x 18 cmAU$ 950.00
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 2; bespeckled, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics32 x 20 x 19 cmAU$ 950.00
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 3; the choir was much more than anticpated, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics24 x 19 x 20 cmSold
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 4; double faced ghoul, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics34 x 45 x 35 cmSold
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 5; egg eyes, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics27 x 20 x 21 cmSold
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Mish MeijersGreek Chorus member 6; upside down ghoul, 2018glazed earthenware ceramics34 x 18 x 18 cmSold