On attending the Monash University Exhibition in Caulfield, Emilie and I have now discovered that we went to the wrong side of the exhibition, to our relief. In doing so it seems that we have missed out on some great design work and instead left appalled and traumatized by the so called art we did see.
Upon our arrival, we entered a dark room. Once we walked in the doors they closed behind us leaving us to feel trapped in complete darkness. In front of us there was a LCD screen with a gaunt looking face staring at us. Feeling creeped out we walked around the corner in hope to fine the exit to see another screen with a mouse running in its wheel. Each room we walked into got a little more weird. This is when we decided that we must be in the wrong place.
After escaping that creepy experience, we made our way to the entrance of the Design and Arts building. As we walked in there was a lady at the front, we made sure we were going in the right direction after being spooked. The lady at the entrance directed us down the closest hall to the right. Walking closer to the hall we were directed to walk down we were greeted my horrific photography of three images of women being raped and attacked. They were untitled, but there description was "Victim wearing Calvin Klein" and "Victim wearing D&G watch" For me this was disturbing, I was questioning if the artist behind this was trying a new fashion campaign? Shock value? Either way it was not something I believe should be on display or even considered art never mind greeting people.
Moving down the hallway, the art became more intense. Four paintings on the wall were a self portrait of the same guy but each had a mirror image. One was a normal painting and the reflection was either, stabbed in the face, twisted, or even had its eyes scratched out. Not something that I really wanted to continue to see Emilie and I entered another dark room where a video was playing. At first we were unsure of what was going on and what the point was. The girl on the video was crouched on the floor surrounded by red. We weren't quite sure what to make of it until we turned around and saw correspondence on the wall. This girl was vomiting, and she wanted to display it as her work of art. But the Dean had to refuse it due to OH&S regulations and the bio hazard it would cause. How in the world cold she for starters even want to display her own vomit, never mind consider it any form of art?!
Horrified, we walked on, almost concerned as to what we were going to be exposed to next. Going upstairs we entered a room where there were a number of paintings all done by the same artist. Again, another rape victim, but all the other 20 odd paintings that were being displayed were all related to Hollywood misfortunes. The weird and twisted world of what the A list stars go through. Whether is be Paula Abdul who found her stalker had commit suicide out the front of her house, or Liza Menelli and one of her husbands that was obsessed with Judy Garland and made her make porn. Everything was weird and twisted.
The last straw for Emilie and I was when we entered one exhibition, looking at a piece of art, I heard Emilie calling me over to one exhibit. She was explaining how she saw this particular artist on Acurrant Affair one night. Looking at this so called piece of art, it looked like a cake tin that she had used, putting a few plastic flowers in it and pouring resin in to set it. Emilie told me to look closer. There were actual human feces added to this display. I had to doubt check my reading the description. To my disappointment, she was right. In disgust we both turned around to be even more horrified. There on the wall opposite this monstrosity was a video of the "artist" in the process of MAKING her art. It was disgusting.
We left there and then. This is not something I wanted to be exposed to, and personally I don't think anyone should be. I believe that if this is what people are now trying to consider a form of art, then we might need to go back to when art actually had rules. There is no talent in creating anything of this sort and I cant imagine anyone would want to see bodily fluids in general never mind as art.
This exhibition should not be displayed or promoted and we should have been warned of the graphic content before viewing each exhibit. If this is something Monash University is trying to nurture their students into doing I'm glad to not get an arts degree.
Walking away from this, I have never felt so sick and violated. I'm sure when constructing the Bauhaus to let students open their mind and be free with their art and thought process this is NOT what they had in mind.