Janet Laurence

Memory Garden - Rembrandt's View , 2011
Duraclear, oil, pigent on acrylic, Dibond mirror
5 panels: 100 x 210 cm (overall)

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Provenance
The artist
Acquired directly from the above in 2011


"The fluidity between opposing states such as light and darkness, opacity and transparency, forms another recurrent theme in Laurence's art. Large, semi-transparent veils of photographic film create architectural corridors through which viewers walk, their presence recorded in reflection and momentarily enmeshed within the imagery that surrounds them. The smearing and spillage of fluids and pigments onto glass and metal similarly creates a sense of disturbance and flux. Laurence's creation of experiential environments, focus upon the viewer as an active producer of meaning, suggests a coming together of different worlds and, with it, a holistic integration of art and life.' (Rachel Kent, Janet Laurence: Transpiration, exh. cat. Sherman Galleries, 2000)

  • Memory Garden - Rembrandt's View

Image courtesy of the artist and Arc One Gallery, Melbourne


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For over three decades, Janet Laurence has created artworks and installations grounded in delicate balances that hold the natural world together. Her works synthesise a scientific understanding of nature into immersive, reverential installations that record the effects of climate change, deforestation, species extinction and the degradation of the Great Barrier Reef.

Born in Sydney in 1947, Laurence studied in Italy and the United States, where she encountered Land and Earth Art, including the works of Alan Sonfist, and saw a retrospective of Joseph Bueys at the Guggenheim Museum (1979) which she has described as formative. Her work draws on literary influences like W.G. Sebald as well as unusual sources like Piet Mondrian, whose theosophical writings and geometric compositions find a place in some of Laurence's series. A pervading interest across Laurence's work has been to challenge the boundaries of the museum space and create immersive works that mirror the feeling of being in nature - in many cases literally using glass and mirrors in her installations.

In 2019, Laurence received a major survey, After Nature, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. In 2017, coinciding with the loan of works from the Rijksmuseum to the Art Gallery of New South Wales for the exhibition Rembrandt and the Dutch Golden Age, Laurence exhibited the installation Matter of the Masters (2017-18). Her installation Deep Breathing: Resuscitation for the Reef was exhibited at the Musée National D'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France (2015) and at the Australian Museum, Sydney (2016). She has exhibited at Biennales in Cuenca, Ecuador (2016), Sydney (2010), Adelaide (2008), and at the 11th Venice Achitecture Biennale, Venice, Italy (2008). Laurence was a trustee of the Art Gallery of New South Wale from 1995-2005 and was the subject of John Beard's winning portrait in the 2007 Archibald Prize.