An Ever Expanding Universe (WA) > WA
Because of its title, my initial reaction to this exhibition was one of curiosity. Read More
Art Deco 1910 - 1939 (VIC) > VIC
With its Bakelite radio, Tamara De Lempicka painting and luxurious dressing table complete with intricate ivory inlays, the opening room of the National Gallery of Victoria’s Art Deco show says it all. Read More
Melbourne Art Fair (VIC) > VIC
With 80 commercial galleries, 10 project spaces, two specially commissioned installations and anticipated sales at the $10.5 million mark, the Melbourne Art Fair isn’t the sort of place to play things down. Read More
Puberty Blues
To stay sane in this world it is sometimes necessary to step back and laugh at the sheer nonsense that follows in the wake of a moral scandal. Read More
Robert Jenyns (NSW) > NSW
Pop psychologists and armchair analysts are masters of the succinct and the obvious. Read More
The enchanted forest: new gothic storytellers (VIC) > VIC
Curiouser and curiouser... a new approach to gothic. Read More
Turn, Turn, Turn: the past talks to the present (NSW) > NSW
Nick Waterlow is the only person to have curated more than one Biennale of Sydney. Read More
VIVID National Photographic Festival (ACT) > ACT
Australian photography festivals are seemingly multiplying at a rapid pace, with VIVID being the latest member to join the growing team. Read More
Pop psychologists and armchair analysts are masters of the succinct and the obvious. They sum up the serpentine makeovers required to negotiate life’s complexities into simple one-liners such as, “You spend your entire life getting over your childhood.” But they do have a point, defining
moments can come very early on.
The austerity of sculptor Robert Jenyns’s childhood years still echoes through his work, not in a grim or self indulgent manner, but in his ongoing obsession and playful engagement with toys. Jenyns’s was born at the tail end of World War II, and his early years were characterised by shortages of the things most Aussie kids these days take for granted. As he says, “there were no toys, if you wanted something you had to make it yourself.” Which is exactly what Jenyns did and he never really stopped.
On his tenth birthday, Jenyns was given his first Meccano set, an exciting event he still remembers fondly. Meccano, with its nifty pre-drilled parts and tiny nuts and bolts, meant he could construct his own playthings without having to scavenge materials from around the house, or out back in the bush. The first thing he made was a tractor, and along with other vehicular boy-toy classics like cars, trucks and flying machines, he’s been making them in one form or another ever since.
Jenyn’s first solo show was a direct reaction to his childhood memories of toys, or more accurately, the lack of them. As he recalls, he had a Canadian school mate who was the proud owner of several luxurious, state of the art, motorised mini airplanes. Mustering his Aussie post war, make-do ingenuity, Jenyns would construct his own from twigs and bits of string, but they would never fly quite right and he admits, “I was really jealous.” Decades later in his 1974 The Plane Show, held at Watters Gallery in Sydney (who still represent him), Jenyns filled the gallery with sculptures based on model airplanes.
Robert Jenyns, Car, 2006, painted metal, steel, perspex,
wheels, 70.6 x 191 x 68cm
In 2005, under difficult circumstances, the Tasmania based sculptor returned to Meccano for inspiration, with stunning results. It was one of those cases in which he made the best of a bad situation. Having finally retired from a distinguished career as a teacher, and as Studio Head of sculpture at the University of Tasmania School of Art for two decades, Jenyns moved house and embarked on building a new studio, only to find himself embroiled in a protracted battle with the neighbours. Without a studio space, Jenyns was forced into finding a new way of working. As he explains, “If I’m not making art, I get really angry, I’m like a dead bear’s bum, not very pleasant to be around! It’s something that I’ve got to do really.” At the suggestion of his sons, he began using Meccano to create maquettes for sculptures. These are then
carefully scaled up before being manufactured in Aluminium by a local engineering firm.
In 2006, Jenyn’s used this method to create Meanwhile.....down south in Tasmania, a nearly life sized logging truck assembled from his own custom built jumbo Meccano, complete with real logs. This piece is characteristic of Jenyns’s work in that even though its toy form evokes playful, nostalgic images of childhood, it also carries a sharp political message: deforestation is not a game. Jenyns’s truck was a finalist in the 2006 Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award and in 2008, he took out the outdoor exhibition’s big prize with his Meccano caravan, Pont de l'Archêveché, which pays tribute to Albert Tucker, one of his early inspirations.
In his latest solo show, Jenyns presents drawings and paintings along with his 3D objects, but he admits, “Sculpture is the thing that I love most.” Jenyns is an artist who enjoys the physical act of making, as he explains, “My philosophy has always been, I think with my hands.” In this exhibition he once again presents big boy’s toys, but it’s not all fun and games. Jenyns’s giant Meccano car, ship, plane, double-decker bus and truck can easily be read as a simple, almost whimsical nod to childhood, but closer inspection reveals very adult issues. The ship carries a cargo of woodchips, the bright red bus symbolises an alien culture, the plane is a jet fighter, harbinger of death. Robert Jenyns's Meccano sculptures tell complex stories, both personal and political.
Robert Jenyns, Pont de L'Archêveché
Watters Gallery 23 July - 16 August
Tracey Clement is an artist and writer