Chaos & Order celebrates over 80 Australian and international artists in an ambitious survey of the RMIT Art Collection including Yhonnie Scarce, Michael Cook, Juan Ford, and Chris Bond.
A riot of painting, sculpture, photography, sound, and new media, the exhibition embraces the contradictions inherent in public art collections. How does one reconcile the academic style of Rupert Bunny with the minimalism of Robert Hunter, or the hyperrealism of Sam Jinks, without retreating to historical narrative?
Public collections can be paradoxical beasts. They strive to adhere to strict criteria (chronology, style, or taxonomy; art history, theory, and criticism) or be encyclopedic in their holdings but are as frequently defined by what they have failed to acquire. Just as often, the curiosities, outsiders, and novelties that fall outside the stated ambit of a collection prove to be its great successes: serendipity uncovers many hidden treasures. Chaos underlies the myth of order.
The intended purpose of the RMIT art collection is to tell the story of the university, its ideals, and aspirations. Curated by Jon Buckingham Chaos & Order takes this broad remit, and demonstrates the impossibility of a definitive narrative that accurately traces the evolution of artistic style, thought, and technique across decades and generations. Instead, it suggests visual, poetic, thematic, and emotional relationships between works created over the past 100 years, and dispenses with the restrictive dictates of historical, technical, or stylistic categories.