Matthew Sleeth (visual artist)

Matthew Sleeth (born 1972) is an Australian visual artist who lives and works between Melbourne and New York City and is known for his cross disciplinary practice across a range of media. His body of work often playfully reveals the power relations that underpin contemporary social and political systems.

Summary

Sleeth established his early reputation with a number of photographic monographs. Roaring Days,[1] largely consists of experiments with street photography made while still a student, The Bank Book[2] is a response to the making of a feature film, and Tour of Duty[3] looks at how the West reacts to a crisis, using the conflict in East Timor as the starting point.

In 2001 Matthew Sleeth was named one of the 30 most influential artists under 30 in PDN Magazine.[4]

In 2005/6 Sleeth lived in Tokyo as part of the Australia Council’s studio residency program and was named as one of Australia’s 50 most collectable artists by Australian Art Collector Magazine in 2006 and 2008.[5] His book Tour of Duty was included in The Photobook: A History volume 2[6] by Martin Parr and Gerry Badger.

In recent years his practice has been more conceptually driven, working across media, primarily engaging with photography in addition to video, sculpture and print-making. The exhibition Sleeth presented for the 2008 Melbourne International Arts Festival, Pattern Recognition, was described as exploring "ideas about photography itself".[7] His most recent solo exhibition, Various Positions (parts 1 through 6), opened at New York's Claire Oliver Gallery in Chelsea, Manhattan on 18 March 2009, and was described as "working toward a new photographic aesthetic".[8]

In 2010 Sleeth was a recipient of the Siemens-RMIT Fine Art Scholarship Award for his work Scale Model for Still Life which is a 3D printed sculpture using Stereolithography.

Monographs

Solo exhibitions

2010 - 2015

2000 - 2009

1996 - 1999

Galleries

References

  1. M.33, Melbourne, 1998
  2. M.33, Melbourne, 2001
  3. Hardie Grant Books, Melbourne, 2002
  4. "Matthew Sleeth" - Claire Sykes, PDN, March 2001
  5. Issue 44, Australian Art Collector Magazine, 2008
  6. Phaidon, London, 2006
  7. "Making order out of everyday chaos" - Suzy Freeman-Greene, The Age, 27 September 2008
  8. "Sleeth in the city", Exposure - An Aperture blog

External links

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