By Ian Coldwell
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| The Four Horsemen of the Twenty First Century Apocalypse - artist Penny Bryne will discuss what is was that drove her to create this unusual art-work held at the Shepparton Art Museum. |
The multiple effects of a changing climate are on many
people’s minds these days, including artists.
On Wednesday, December 17, at 7.30 for 8:00 pm in the Shepparton Art Museum (SAM), the Friends of SAM and Slap Tomorrow will present an evening of conversation between Penny Byrne and Kate Auty.
Penny is the ceramic artist dubbed by the Art Collector ‘the porcelain vandal’ who made “The Four Horsemen of the Twenty First Century Apocalypse” back in 2009.
Kate is a Vice Chancellors Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne and the former Commissioner for Environmental Sustainability Victoria.
SAM acquired Penny Byrne’s beautiful four piece porcelain
artwork for the permanent collection in 2010. The horsemen represent a
contemporary interpretation of the biblical revelation story of the four
horsemen of the apocalypse.On Wednesday, December 17, at 7.30 for 8:00 pm in the Shepparton Art Museum (SAM), the Friends of SAM and Slap Tomorrow will present an evening of conversation between Penny Byrne and Kate Auty.
Penny is the ceramic artist dubbed by the Art Collector ‘the porcelain vandal’ who made “The Four Horsemen of the Twenty First Century Apocalypse” back in 2009.
Kate is a Vice Chancellors Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne and the former Commissioner for Environmental Sustainability Victoria.
In Penny’s story, four of the great cultural challenges to human kind and the many other species of nature on earth are represented through the names of the horses; water shortages, peak oil, food scarcity and over population.
Each of these challenges have been described by philosophers
as ‘unintended’ consequences of the phenomenal successes of the industrial
revolution, an epoch which is said to be moving beyond its own logic into a
phase of self dissolution; a transitional Apocalypse navigated through the
‘risk society’
and it’s promising technologies, to somewhere that is not yet, a time, that we
hope will bring a more harmonious and flourishing environment to the world.
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| Penny Byrne at work on one of the four horseman. |
Who better to have in conversation about an artwork that
encompasses these serious questions than the artist herself, Penny Byrne, and a
person who keeps such a watchful eye over environmental sustainability, Kate
Auty?
The committees of the Friends of SAM and Slap Tomorrow
are excited to present this opportunity for the public to participate in an
important discussion over a drink and a nibble.
The Four Horsemen of the Twenty First Century Apocalypse will be mounted on their steeds and their plinths in the gallery that night. Do come along.
The Four Horsemen of the Twenty First Century Apocalypse will be mounted on their steeds and their plinths in the gallery that night. Do come along.


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