DAMP, Untitled 2009. Mixed media, site specific work for The 6th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT6), Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, 2009. 

Image description: A colour photograph shows a partial interior view of DAMP’s artwork Untitled 2009 made for the 6th Asia Pacific Triennial in 2009. The image shows a room with plywood walls, a bookcase in one corner, a tall brightly coloured object made of paper and card in another corner. At the top center of the wall, the word DAMP is cut out in white letters - in the style of pop artist Robert Indiana’s famous “LOVE” design. Two cardboard cut-out guitars are also stuck to the wall. Below this, the wall is covered in posters, drawings and printed pictures, like a community noticeboard or studio wall. The bookcase is full of books and objects, including a yellow cassette player, two ceramic plates, a coffee pot, and a small locked safe. On a shelf high on the wall to the right, sit three or four small handmade puppets. The top of a bean bag is just visible at the bottom of the photograph. The busy interior gives the impression of a messy shared house, artist studio, or hang out space. 

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Rosemary forde
Art holds a high place in my life: DAMP Monograph 1995-

Softcover, 230 x 300 mm, 160pp, digital print
First edition of 300
Editor and author: Rosemary Forde
Artist and contributing author: DAMP
Assistant editor: Ragnar Thomas
Design by Dominic Forde
Published by 3-ply, 2024
ISBN 978-0-6483942-2-8
RRP $45.45
Forthcoming

Quantity:
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Titled after an early work by Melbourne-based artist group DAMP (‘Art holds a high place in my life’, 1997), this substantial monograph by curator and scholar Rosemary Forde chronicles 25 years of DAMP’s practice. Art Holds a High Place in my Life: DAMP Monograph 1995- includes reproduced archival essays, ephemera, reviews, alongside new critical writing and extensive visual documentation, as well as notes and drawings from DAMP’s archive.

DAMP is the long-lasting result of a class project, initiated through the pedagogical experiments of artist-educator Geoff Lowe at the Victorian College of the Arts in 1995. With a shifting membership, DAMP's artistic identity is authored and dispersed unevenly amongst at least seventy-five individual members who have joined and left the ranks over the past nearly three decades. Made up of artists, students, educators, architects, musicians, filmmakers, non-artists, and those who persistently asked to join, DAMP's membership is representative of a particular Melbournian artist peer group, embedded in a burgeoning artist-run scene.

DAMP was one of the first artist groups in 1990s Australia to work in social practice and relational aesthetics, to experiment with art and pedagogy, and in many cases, to exchange places with their audiences. Working across media including performance, video, painting, social exchange, public art, sculpture and curation, DAMP’s practice has at times been ephemeral, not easily collected, and not easily categorised. While dozens of short catalogue essays and reviews have referenced their work, Art Holds a High Place in My Life is the only book-length publication to provide a critical record of their pioneering artistic practice.

Writers reprinted in the publication include notable critics, curators and artists such as Hannah Matthews, Stuart Koop, Jarrod Rawlins, Andrew McQualter, Brigid Magner, Megan Backhouse, and Marc Misic. Rosemary Forde’s new essay complements these historic texts, critically positioning the group’s history, artistic practice, and ongoing legacy.

Anne Marsh has highlighted the ‘scholarly neglect of our visual culture’ and scarcity of research and books on Australian artists, she estimates there are ‘thousands of monographs and essays that need to be written about Australian art’. Anthony Gardner raised similar concerns when writing of the ‘resounding lack of global traction’ for Australian art and artists. He attributes this in part to the Australian art sector’s ‘less than stellar record of self-historicisation, of documenting and disseminating their own histories’. Through Art Holds a High Place in my Life: DAMP Monograph 1995-, Rosemary Forde offers a model for redressing this imbalance. Her scholarship and her experimentation with the monograph form extends 3-ply’s interest in artist-led and curator-led monographs on under-recognized Australian artists, including More Than What There Is by Elizabeth Newman, and 19 Desires and One Belief by Angela Brennan.


Art Holds a High Place in my Life: DAMP Monograph 1995- will be anticipated and launched through a series of events.

  • The first pre-launch event offered a preview of book spreads, and an opportunity to converse with author and editor Rosemary Forde, at the Same Page Art Book Fair at Gertrude Contemporary, Saturday 19 October, 1:00-4:00pm.

  • The second pre-launch event was a screening of the DAMP Video Anthology at Composite Moving Image Agency, Brunswick Mechanics Institute, Saturday 26 October, 4 - 6pm. 

  • Further launch details and distribution activations to be announced soon.


CREDITS

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body. Supported by the City of Melbourne Arts Grants.