Helen Grogan 

Selected documenation w/ writings 


  1. Zara Sigglekow, splitting open the surface on which it is inscribed

  2. Sarinah Masukor, spillover

  3. David Komary, POEM (with insistence on plurality) & INSIDE SMALL DANCE 

  4. Charlie Sofo, Catalogue of studio activities / Itinerary of scores 

  5. Gillian Brown, SET AND DRIFT 

  6. Tara McDowell, Observation proposition for interior of indicated edges as well as other unindicated parameters already in ocurrence - Rustavi 


Selected books

   

Daniel Ward (Ed.)  & no more poetryNO NO NO ISSUE TWO, no more poetry, Naarm, 2022.

Alex Gawronski & Knulp. Transplant; Sydney College of The Arts, University of Sydney, Sydney, 2021

Komary, David. & Galerie Stadtpark. POSITION; Schlebrügge, Vienna, 2020

Doughty, Jacqueline. & Hope, Cat. & Gardner, Sally. & Gellatly, Kelly. & Ian Potter Museum of Art, host institution. The Score / The Ian Potter Museum of Art; curated by Jacqueline Doughty. The Ian Potter Museum of Art, Parkville, 2017

Dornau, Lauren, Sally Gardner, Anneke Jaspers, and Hannah Mathews. 2014. Framed Movements; Australian Center for Contemporary Art. Melbourne, 2017

Mathews, Hannah. & Testen, Žiga. & Geddes, Stuart. To note : notation across disciplines; Perimeter Editions, Melbourne, 2017

McDowell, Tara (Ed.) & Testen, Žiga. 124,908; curated by Tara McDowell. 3-ply, Victoria, 2016


























Mark
TEXT. Sarinah Masukor, ‘Helen Grogan - POEM (with insistence on pluraity)’, Gertrude Contemporary, 2015
IMG. 1-2: Three adjoining spaces with manifold edges and CONCERT 1: Balustrades, West Space, 2015. IMG. 3-8-  POEM (with insistence on pluraity), Gertrude Glasshouse / Contemporary, 2015. VID. 1.  VID. 1. One of several edits of compiled footage played on the horizontal screen within the 2015 version of POEM (with insistence on pluraity), Gertrude Glasshouse / Gertrude Contemporary , Fitzroy, 2015.


        In Helen Grogan’s work the line between viewing bodies, live performance and objects (structures, monitors, film) is often barely visible. Their interaction articulates elements of space and encourages an extraordinary physical concentration on the present. Grogan’s practice is a continuous process of looking and listening. It is a process both systematic and open to the accidental, a practice that is committed to attention and to the cultivation of embodied thought, in the time and space of the now. All parts of this practice, installation, video, action and photography—including a daily collection of visual research apparent in her informal Instagram feed—connect, reflect and speak back to each other and together form a body of work that is concerned with space as a dispositif. Defined by Adrian Martin as ‘the arrangement of diverse elements in such a way as to trigger, guide and organise a set of actions.’1 Grogan’s dispositifs slow the viewer’s gaze, engage the body and direct the viewer to elements of space that frequently go unobserved.

        This experience of focused attention has, in previous exhibitions, been accompanied by instances of live performance. In THREE ADJOINING SPACES WITH MANIFOLD EDGES (West Space, 2015) the artist enacted two CONCERT works, where structures installed in the gallery—including steel frames, mirrors, monitors and floor matting—were adjusted and reinstalled in front of a dispersed audience. The performance began fluidly out of the time preceding it and, at the start, it was hard to tell who in the room was ‘performing’ and who was ‘watching.’ Grogan’s live works feel, at first, formless and mundane, but then, after a period of time has passed, the work’s structure suddenly breaks open and the body locks into the rhythm of the specific time and space and into a state of what Grogan calls ‘embodied observation.’ Actions that at first appeared disparate and un-planned coalesce with disarming clarity.




        In POEM (with insistence on plurality), Grogan removes the performing body from the work, evincing similar effects through the performing object and its interaction with the viewing body. A suspended glass pane directs observation, framing different parts of the room in relation to where the viewer is stand-ing, sitting or walking. This mobile glass frame is cantilevered across the full length of the gallery to a steel trolley structure. The pane and strapping shift in tandem, subject to the conditions of the space. The frame is, as Grogan observes, ‘cast adrift’ and the movement of the pane and position of the viewer in time creates re framings and infinitely variable views. In a sketch video made in prepara-tion for the show, the glass catches the light and the movement of it illuminates the texture of a wall—a material sight that might otherwise go unnoticed. The structure’s action, and the sensation of embodied observation, develops out of the interplay of viewer and moving form.

      The effects of Grogan’s work are accumulative. In THREE ADJOINING SPACES WITH MANIFOLD EDGES, Grogan made several films in the gallery during deinstallation that were not seen by the audience or intended to be shown, but nonetheless formed part of the work, both conceptually and as research. Grogan has said that ‘committing to research or a specific experiment often seems more worthwhile than presenting existing, pre conceived arguments,’2 and the excessive nature of the video work (it is impossible to watch all the footage) exemplifies this part of her practice. In POEM (with insistence on plurality) video material filmed, edited and reedited in the gallery during the installation and exhibition is displayed on two monitors resting on wheeled structures.The videos are compiled of long takes of the struc-tures installed in the gallery, long takes of the gallery space, long takes of the street outside the gallery, long takes of the work installed in the artist’s studio, and long takes of the work against a backdrop, with photographic studio lighting. The diegetic sounds captured during film-ing extend the portraits of the space into layered sonic fields, oscillating both between the two monitors, and the interior and exterior of the gallery. The videos draw attention to the formal and material qualities of the structures and to their performances in different spatial contexts, as well as participate in the close observation of the site (both inside and outside).

        Through a series of shifts and balances, Grogan’s work elicits an experience of being present in this moment, in this space. This is, in part, a result of the harmonisation of two different experi-ences of duration. At first, the viewer’s experience of duration and that of the work clash, but over time, directed by the dispositif, the two come together, activat-ing attention, embodied observation and the sensation of being in time.

1.     Adrian Martin, Mise en scène and Film Style (Lon-don: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 179.
2.     Helen Grogan, ‘Visible Actions, A conversation between Helen Grogan, Eugenia Lim and Elvis Richardson,’ un Magazine, 7.1, accessed 18 Decem-ber 2015, http://unprojects.org.au/magazine/issues/issue-7-1/visible-actions/






PHOTO CREDITS. IMG 1-2. Laura May Grogan. IMG 3-8 & VID.1 Helen Grogan

PROJECT DETAILS.
Helen Grogan, POEM (with insistence on pluraity), Gertrude Glasshouse / Gertrude Contemporary , Fitzroy, 2015 & FirstDraft, Sydney, 2016, & Gallerie Stadtpark, Krems, 2018-2019.
Helen Grogan, CONCERT 1: Balustrades with performers Deanne Butterworth, Simon MacEwan, Shelley Lascia, Geoff Robinson, Anna Varendorf, Helen Grogan within Three adjoining spaces with manifold edges. curtated by Liang Luscombe for WestSpace. This project was re-installed intermittently through a 5-week exhibition duration. Developed as solo exhibition (alongside Geoff Robinson’s own solo exhibtion) for West Space, Melbounrne, Australia. 2015.
Seen in VID. 1. One of several edits of compiled footage played on the horizontal screen within the 2015 version of POEM (with insistence on pluraity), Gertrude Glasshouse / Gertrude Contemporary , Fitzroy, 2015.
   



Mark