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Exhibition

Melbourne & Canberra Exhibitions

I’m currently working towards two exhibitions in Australia featuring a range of recent paintings and prints.

The first opens 6pm, 18 April 2024 at Alexandra Sasse Gallery in Melbourne. This will be a duo exhibition with Maryanne Wick and runs until 11 May.

The second opens 2 May 2024 at Beaver Galleries in Canberra, and runs until 18 May. I’ve been represented by Beaver Galleries for over 20 years, and this will be my seventh solo exhibition with the gallery.

I can’t wait to travel back to Australia to be there for the openings!

Exhibition at Remanius Vision

Søndermarken 2021, oil on linen, 46 x 46 cm

I have a selection of new works on display at Remanius Vision, in Frederiksberg, Copenhagen. These include four paintings of Danish landscapes – from very the local Frederiksberg Have, Søndermarken and Strandgade in the city, to Fanø – a small island off the far western side of Denmark. The two lithographs, Forest (Bøllemosen) and Fanø, were produced during a residency at the Statens Værkstedet for Kunst in June this year.

The works will be on display until early in the new year. I hope you might get the chance to stop by!

Gammel Kongevej 179
Frederiksberg C 1850 (view map)
Mon – Fri 10.00 – 17.30 Sat 10.00 – 15.00

Art in the time of Corona

Our exhibition at Stereo Exchange opened on 20 November on a chilly evening – we were super happy to see so many friends and colleagues present..even the police dropped by briefly to check on our corona safety precautions.
Due to the increased COVID19 restrictions, the exhibition is now open via appointment only until 19 December. Email the gallery on to arrange a time: [email protected]

Stereo Exchange

I’m excited to be invited to work with Better Weather, the Danish collaborative duo Anne Werner and Kasper Lynge Jensen, on an exhibition next month at Stereo Exchange. We will be combining our respective practices to make a site specific installation. Opening 20 Nov 2020.

Return of the archive

I have some work in an exhibition that celebrates a history of printmaking at Megalo Print Studio in Canberra. ‘Return of the Archive’ features work by artists that have been associated with the access workshop over the last forty years. The prints are drawn from an archive that was recently returned from the collection of the National Gallery of Australia. Participating artists include: Alison Alder, Surya Bajracharya, GW Bot, Heather Burness, Dianne Fogwell, Annie Franklin, Kirrily Hammond, Bernard Hardy, Nicci Haynes, Patti Holden, Judy Horacek, Suzanne Knight, Julian Laffan, Arone Meeks, Erica Seccombe and Graeme Wood, among others.

1 Sept – 30 Dec 2020

Megalo Print Studio + Gallery
21 Wentworth Avenue, Kingston, ACT Australia
10am – 3pm, Tuesday – Friday  | +612 6232 6041 |  www.megalo.org

Giardino segreto 2001
burnished aquatint & drypoint, 5 x 7 cm

New Acquisition

I’m very happy to report that the Newcastle Art Gallery recently acquired my drawing ‘Swoon I’ 2009 for its collection.

It’s especially exciting to be part of my hometown collection – I was born in Newcastle, way back when!

Swoon I 2009
charcoal and graphite on paper
70.6 x 50.1 cm
Purchased through the Gil Docking Drawing Fund 2019
Newcastle Art Gallery collection

Glowing ‘Lowlands’ review

I’m so lucky to have the eminent Dr Sasha Grishin follow my career, right from one of my earliest exhibitions Of Landscape and Memory, which he reviewed in 2000.

On Friday Dr Grishin reviewed Lowlands in glowing terms, in a piece titled ‘Putting a touch of magic into everyday reality‘, in the Canberra Times that opened with ‘she creates gem-like tableaux, which shimmer on the gallery walls’. The mention of Clarice Beckett and the ‘European tradition of the sublime’  is high praise indeed, and greatly appreciated.

‘Hammond has been exhibiting for over two decades and has established a reputation as an artist who manages to transfigure a common everyday reality into something that has been touched with a bit of magic.’

oil on copper, 20.0 x 24.2 cm (image); 23.3 x 27.5 x 3.7 cm (frame)

Lowlands exhibition opens 6 Sept

I’m super pleased that the opening of my exhibition ‘lowlands‘ went really well – the works were finally all together on the wall and I could take a step back on my activities over the last 6 months. It was also lovely to see some old friends and feel that Canberra art community support.

M Collection Exhibition

16 – 20 May 2018

Menzies Art Brands

1 Darling St, South Yarra

Glenmorgahn, Brunswick East 2013

 

The M Collection celebrated 10 years of collecting with an exhibition at Menzies Art Brands, South Yarra In Melbourne. On display was a diverse and outstanding collection of work selected by the 10 members of the M Collection, who have been rotating the works in their homes every 6 months since 2008. Two of my paintings were included – Glenmorgahn, Brunswick East 2013 and The Gloaming 2013.

Memento

Memento 2

I’m really happy (and relieved) to report that the show was a success and I was delighted to receive a lot of positive comments about the work. Not many paintings remain in stock – brilliant incentive to get back into the studio!

more news

ReadNow clip - 838923704

This article, slightly different from the Diamond Valley Leader, was the result of a phone interview about the show. Unfortunately Sim couldn’t join me for the photo shoot.

Keepsake is open

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Our exhibition ‘Keepsake’ opened at Bundoora Homestead on Saturday – thanks to everyone who came along. There was a great atmosphere, with 8 other exhibitions opening that day and a fantastic opening speech by Emma Busowsky Cox.

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Sim Luttin and I gave an artist talk about the works, the materials, the exhibition process and how we’d like to continue to have shows together – watch this space!

 

DENFAIR

Thornbury laneway 2017

Gallerysmith will be featuring my work at DENFAIR, Melbourne, details as follows:

Melbourne Exhibition and Convention Centre, South Wharf
Thursday 8 June – Friday 9 June, 10–6pm (open to professionals)
Saturday 10 June, 10–5pm (open to public)

Upcoming exhibitions

oil on copper, 9.0 x 12.0 cm

I’ve been working towards 2 forthcoming exhibitions, the first will also feature the work of Sim Luttin. Our work shares a similar aesthetic sensibility and I’m excited by the prospect of collaborating on this project, details as follows:

Keepsake

Kirrily Hammond and Sim Luttin

9 August – 22 October 2017

Opening 4-6 pm Saturday 26 August, with artists’ talk at 3pm

Bundoora Homestead Art Centre, Melbourne

Images, left to right:

Kirrily Hammond, Train skyline 2017, oil on copper, 9.0 x 12.0 cm

Sim Luttin, Moment #1: Backyard view 2017, sterling silver, sublimated aluminium, glass, 4.1 x 6.9 x 1.0 cm pendant)

 

Ciney, Belgium 2017

The second exhibition will be a solo exhibition at Gallerysmith, with all new work from 2017, details as follows:

Memento

12 October – 11 November 2017

Gallerysmith, Melbourne

I’ll be updating new works in the artworks section of this site as they develop..stay tuned!

Image: Ciney, Belgium 2017, oil on copper, 9.0 x 12.0 cm (image), 12.3 x 15.3 x 3.7 cm (frame)

 

Landmarks is open until 25 Sept

Landmarks text

 

landmarks install

Landmarks was opened on the 25 August with a beautiful speech by Kelly Gellatly, Director, Ian Potter Museum of Art. I’m so happy to be included in this show. I’ll post some more images of it all soon..

It’s open Wednesday to Saturday 11 am – 5 pm, Sunday 1 pm – 5 pm

Counihan Gallery, 233 Sydney Road (inside Brunswick Town Hall), Brunswick

Sydney Morning Herald Review

Review of Kirrily Hammond: Suburbia, with menace in the air

November 14, 2014 – 11:45PM

Sasha Grishin

Street Signs, Brunswick EastStreet Signs, Brunswick East

Kirrily Hammond: Suburbia
Beaver Galleries, 81 Denison Street, Deakin
Closes November 25, Tues-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat-Sun 9am-5pm

Although most Australians live in the suburbs, Australian artists have generally been a little shy of this subject.  There have been notable exceptions, for example, the early works of John Brack and the art of Howard Arkley, but these hardly constitute a major tradition in Australian art, as do the landscape, the outback or still life compositions.

Kirrily Hammond, now a Melbourne-based artist but until about a decade ago living in Canberra, is fundamentally a printmaker with a romantic predisposition.  Her images are moody, frequently set at dusk, and often touched by the sense of awe and embracing the sublime in nature.  She has now brought this sensibility to the streetscapes of her adopted city of Melbourne and its tightly packed inner northern suburbs.

Canberra St, BrunswickCanberra St, Brunswick

In terms of their sense of presence, her work brings to mind those melting tonal visions of Clarice Beckett and her watery images of dawn and dusk in her particular patch of Melbourne, the suburb of Beaumaris.  Except I find something slightly menacing about Hammond’s vision of Melbourne suburbia, particularly the suburb of Brunswick, from which come virtually all of the small oil paintings and charcoal drawings in this exhibition.

The paintings Laneway, Brunswick East, Bladen Ave, Brunswick East, Canberra St, Brunswick and the drawing Street signs, Brunswick East, all imply an exactitude of location through their titles, yet appear to be devoid of human inhabitants.  There is an anonymity in this suburbia, where danger is not depicted, but seems to lurk somewhere behind the facades of suburban houses.  It was in Brunswick that the 29-year-old Jill Meagher was brutally raped and murdered in 2012, an incident which deeply scarred the whole Brunswick community.

There is nothing in Hammond’s quiet observations of suburbia at dusk that would link them to these horrific events, but it is a slightly menacing and foreboding atmosphere that pervades in many of the scenes.  For me the most successful work at this exhibition is the monochrome drawing Street Signs, Brunswick East.  The signs themselves are left deliberately illegible, the facade of the house is thickly veiled in shadows, while the framing foreground space is dominated by a number of fleeting reflections.  Although there is a simplicity in the general compositional structure, the notion of ambiguity gives that slightly unnerving note to the drawing.  As far as the viewer knows, nothing bad has ever happened here, but the note of foreboding suggests invisible evil forces at play in the air.

As with most of Hammond’s exhibitions, this one is quite small, only a dozen pieces, tightly united thematically, but possessing the quality of “otherness”.

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/canberra-life/review-of-kirrili-hammond-suburbia-with-menace-in-the-air-20141114-11m8ho.html#ixzz3J56rpN3l