STUDY FOR ON THE RINGS, 1975
JOHN BRACK
conté on paper
45.5 x 35.5 cm
signed and dated lower left: John Brack 75
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, c1975
Private collection, Adelaide
Deutscher~Menzies, Melbourne, 25 April 1999, lot 62
Private collection, Melbourne
Study for 'On the Rings', 1975, conté and pencil on paper, 72.0 x 55.6 cm, collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra illus. in Grishin, S., The Art of John Brack, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1990, vol. II, cat. p212, pp. 65, 226
The following excerpts are from Grishin, S., The Art of John Brack, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1990, vol. I, pp. 121-122:
'The series of gymnasts consists of ten oil paintings and eight conté drawings. Thematically it presents a logical progression from the ballroom dancing series - the concern with senseless ritual as recreational activities are converted into difficult and testing labour. In its formal language, however, there are signs of a fundamental change. A constant preoccupation in Brack's art is identity. This can be traced back to a youthful interest in books on physiognomy as well as a later study of Nigel Dennis' Cards of Identity with its questions of 're-identification' and 'personal distinctiveness' ... Up to this point, Brack's images of still-life objects - scissors, knives and forks - were kept separate from figure compositions, although he did imbue these still life objects with a symbolic existence. In the gymnast series, the stick-like figures start to lose a little of their human identity and increasingly become formal elements that symbolically convey humanity as observed from a distance. The whole setting is reduced to a minimum - the featureless floors and walls of the gymnasium, with a few lines on the bare floorboards marking off the extent of the playing arena. They are very sparse compositions where the figures remain the dominant elements but no longer occupy most of the picture space.
'The origins of the gymnast motif probably can be traced back to Brack's observation of his own children when they were young, although when he commenced the series his youngest daughter was almost twenty and all the gymnasts in the first series are boys. Implied in this association is the artist's concern that angst is being pushed down onto our children: "... a series of pictures dealing with children doing gymnastic exercises, the idea here is related to balancing and falling, but not absolutely collapsing - you know, the world is going on in a series of stumbling lurches, but not absolutely collapsing ... it is not the abyss, it is stumbling, but it is not the abyss."1
'The series of gymnasts is largely preoccupied with exploring a number of premeditated ambiguities intended as a visual metaphor commenting on the complexity of life ... there is statement about balance and imbalance, movement and stability, unity and discord, implying in the antinomical sense that at the moment of greatest balance there exists the greatest potential for imbalance, that ascent implies descent, and so forth. These slight, almost sexless figures cast against the naked floorboards are involved in part of a ritual as complex as life itself. Having attained for a brief moment a state of triumph, they hover as if frozen on the pinnacle of their success, precariously balancing, tottering on the brink of collapse without actually collapsing.'
1. John Brack on John Brack, Lecture, Australian National University, Canberra, 1977, p. 7