Image of Beckett
Link back to home page
Link button to conference info
Link button to performance info
Link button to exhibitions info
Link button to media info


Exhibitions

The Samuel Beckett Symposium features several art exhibitions which reflect the theme of after Beckett. These exhibitions include the ANYWHERE NOW exhibition to be held at the Scott Donovan Gallery starting on January 5.

Due to circumstances beyond our control, a second art/mixed media exhibition which was to be held at the Wharf Theatre complex has been cancelled. However, a selection of the artists' works are available as virtual exhibition on this site.

Also, look out for CHANGE ALL THE NAMES!, a series of concritiques by conference delegate Jeremy Parrott and a selection of which are available as a virtual exhibition on this site.


EXHIBITION LISTINGS

bulletANYWHERE NOW - Scott Donovan Gallery

a multidisciplinary exhibition celebrating the work of Samuel Beckett to be staged in conjunction with the 2003 Samuel Beckett Symposium in Sydney. Artists were selected whose practice explore themes and concerns in common with Beckett without being narrowly literal or illustrative in their interpretation of the writer’s work.

VIRTUAL EXHIBITIONS

bulletHALLUCINATIONS - Paul Uhlmann

the artist employs a methodology of chance and destruction, agitation and opposition through painting to allow the work to develop its own form - its own image. Initial investigative attempts are often abandoned, destroyed or painted over as the primary motivating form struggles to emerge. Such destructive restlessness is reflected in the pace of life in contemporary society, the obsession with the new, the constant destruction and renewal of cities.

bulletCHANGE ALL THE NAMES! - a whatnot by Jeremy Parrott

 

 

Links to other sitesLinks to other sitesLink to contact detailsLink to new infoLink to site indexLink to contact detailsLink to new info

 

Principal sponsor - University of Western Sydney   Sydney Festival

site index|links|contact|new

©2002 University of Western Sydney
Site design by Andrea Curr