Azlan McLennan

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Azlan McLennan
Born1975 (age 48–49)
Visual art
MovementAnti-art, Political satire

Azlan McLennan (born 1975 in the United States)[1] is a visual artist and socialist activist based in Melbourne, Australia.[2] He is a graduate of the Victorian College of the Arts.[3] His art is known for its political content and has been the subject of considerable debate and media attention in Australia.[4]

Art

Conceptually, McLennan's work tends to be unambiguous and antagonistic from a left-wing perspective, loosely following the traditions of

managerial class of the art world.[7]

McLennan has cited the artists John Heartfield[8] and Leon Kuhn[9] as influences. He has work in collections of the National Gallery of Australia[8] and the National Library of Australia.[10]

Political affiliations

McLennan is a member of the Trotskyist organisation Socialist Alternative.[11] Previously, he has been associated with the Socialist Alliance,[12] the Stop the War Coalition,[13] Students for Palestine,[14] the Refugee Action Collective,[15] the University of Melbourne Graduate Student Association,[16] the Victorian College of the Arts Student Union[17] and the United Voice trade union.[18] He regularly produces posters for the Australian far left's various political demonstrations and meetings.[8] He has written articles for the publications of both Socialist Alternative and the Socialist Alliance.[9][11]

Controversy

Victorian College of the Arts

In August 2003, McLennan hired a Group 4 Securicor guard to keep gallery punters out of an exhibition opening at the VCA. Group 4 run immigration detention centres in Australia, such as Baxter Detention Centre and the now closed Woomera Detention Centre. The security guard was reportedly humiliated due to the incident which occurred at a time of high criticism of the John Howard government's treatment of asylum seekers.[19]

24seven

In May 2004, McLennan produced Fifty-six, an exhibition designed to coincide with

Nazis had a similar position on what they termed degenerate art. McLennan maintains a strong criticism of Israeli policies.[5]

Citylights

In August 2004, McLennan displayed State Sponsored, a collection of portraits of

Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council. Andrew Mac, Citylights' curator and director defended the work on the grounds of diversity of opinion stating the artist's use of "state sponsored" referred to state terrorism.[21]

Platform Artists Group

In September 2005, the City of Melbourne intervened to terminate McLennan's Canberra's 18 exhibition shortly before it was scheduled to be shown at the

Artist-run initiative (ARI), Platform 2. The exhibition was to include images of the then 18 Islamic organisations proscribed as terrorists by the Australian Government and the basis for their formation. City of Melbourne Deputy Mayor Gary Singer claimed the proper guidelines were not followed. Human rights campaigner and barrister Julian Burnside claimed the censorship was about governments testing how much Australians would tolerate such occurrences.[22] McLennan accused City of Melbourne of political censorship and appeasing Zionists.[23] Singer's areas of special interests ironically include civil liberties.[24]

Monash University

Australian Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005, particularly the controversial return to the crime of sedition introduced by the Howard government some weeks later and passed into law the following month; a move highly unpopular amongst the arts sector.[26]

Urban Art

City of Melbourne and acting Transport Minister

Muslim himself.[29] Thomas' lawyer, Rob Stary attacked the work for jeopardising the trial[30] yet weeks later would defend McLennan publicly against the Footscray police.[31]

Trocadero Art Space

Only weeks after the Pay Your Way affair, McLennan's Proudly UnAustralian was removed by the

civil rights. This took place only a few short months after the 2005 Cronulla riots and fuelled the broader debate about racism in Australia.[32]

Australian Centre for Contemporary Art

McLennan wrote an article in 2006 criticising the Artistic Director of the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA), Juliana Engberg over her reaction to artist and VCA student, Ash Keating and his appropriation of ACCA's waste disposal for the use of his art. The Engberg/Keating scandal became widely known amongst Melbourne art circles from the ACCA exhibition opening where it took place and later through the independent electronic magazine Crikey. McLennan's polemic further fuelled debate over Engberg's credentials.[33]

Anna Schwartz Gallery

McLennan featured in Rules of Engagement at Melbourne ARI West Space in May 2007, which dealt with "relationships, power and exchange within the art system" according to the show's curator Mark Feary.[34] McLennan's contribution, Art in a Capitalist Society depicted an authoritative picture of leading private Australian gallerist Anna Schwartz, linked to a quote about exploitation from the Karl Marx treatise Das Kapital. Schwartz has previously criticised McLennan[5] and some have accused McLennan of taking revenge.[35]

University of Melbourne

In a July 2009,

Alex DeLarge in Stanley Kubrick's film adaptation of A Clockwork Orange.[36] McLennan had previously attacked Davis and the university administration as the former General Secretary of the VCA Student Union.[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Art labels Howard a terrorist"[permanent dead link] The Australian, 18 March 2006. Accessed 1 May 2008
  2. ^ "Trotsky vs Stalin: Azlan McLennan" Socialist Alternative, Edition 141, May 2009. Accessed 10 July 2009
  3. ^ "Alumni of the V.C.A." Save the VCA. Accessed 10 July 2009
  4. ^ "Artist Profile: Azlan McLennan" NAVA Quarterly. December 2005. Accessed 10 July 2009
  5. ^ a b c "The politics of art" The Age, 14 May 2004. Accessed 27 April 2008
  6. ^ "25 Years: NAVA at the forefront of Australia’s cultural policy agenda" NAVA Quarterly. December 2008. Accessed 10 July 2009
  7. ^ "Dealing With Art Censorship"[permanent dead link] National Association for the Visual Arts Media Release, 30 March 2009. Accessed 20 April 2009
  8. ^ a b c Azlan McLennan Artabase. Accessed 10 July 2009
  9. ^ a b The Left loses an inspiring artist and comrade Red Flag, 31 December 2013. Accessed 3 January 2014
  10. ^ "Be young & shut up" National Library of Australia. Accessed 4 November 2013
  11. ^ a b "Connex tries to censor pro-Palestinian art" Socialist Alternative, 11 March 2009. Accessed 24 May 2009
  12. ^ "Zionism and imperialism: an unholy alliance" Archived 10 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Melbourne Palestine Solidarity Network, 9 August 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  13. ^ "Propaganda" Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Azlan McLennan website. Accessed 25 January 2009
  14. ^ "Artists Support Boycott Israel 19" Students for Palestine, 18 August 2011. Accessed 24 April 2012
  15. ^ The Red Pen Zine The Red Pen. Accessed 16 November 2010
  16. ^ "Annual Graduate Student Elections 2009" Archived 23 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine University of Melbourne Graduate Student Association, 15 August. 2009. Accessed 27 January 2010
  17. ^ VCA students fight job and course cuts[permanent dead link] Socialist Alternative, Edition 145, September 2009. Accessed 12 June 2010
  18. ^ Egypt: Hossam el-Hamalawy and Reem Maged called before military judges MENA Solidarity Network, 30 May 2011. Accessed 7 January 2014
  19. ^ "VCA artwork raises ethics concerns" The Age, 4 September 2003. Accessed 27 April 2008
  20. ^ "Making Space – spanking the hand that feeds it" Art Right Now, 16 June 2007. Accessed 22 May 2009
  21. ^ "Jewish group blasts 'offensive' artwork" The Age, 10 December 2004. Accessed 27 April 2008
  22. ^ "War on terrorism is claiming victims on the walls of art galleries" Sydney Morning Herald, 16 September 2005. Accessed 3 May 2008
  23. ^ "City council bans 'terror artwork'" The Age, 15 September 2005. Accessed 27 April 2008
  24. ^ "Deputy Lord Mayor Gary Singer" Archived 25 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine City of Melbourne, Accessed 3 May 2008
  25. ^ "Azlan McLennan" Archived 20 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine un Magazine, Volume 7, 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  26. ^ "Artists 'at risk' under terror laws" Archived 27 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine NineMSN, 8 November 2005. Accessed 29 April 2008
  27. ^ "Fare game! Shelters feel the brush of protest" The Age, 10 January 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  28. ^ "My art is not racist" Herald Sun, 12 January 2006. Accessed 24 May 2009
  29. ^ "Political art meets a paranoid state" Socialist Alternative, Edition 99, February 2006. Accessed 25 April 2008
  30. ^ "Public art threatens fair trial: Thomas lawyer" The Age, 12 January 2006. Accessed 24 May 2009
  31. ^ "Defiant artist flies his 'UnAustralian' flag again" The Age, 1 March 2006. Accessed 24 May 2009
  32. ^ "Art prompts call for flag-burning law change" Archived 11 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine The 7.30 Report (Transcript), 6 February 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  33. ^ "Power of one" The Age, 1 September 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  34. ^ "Rules of Engagement" West Space (Catalogue Essay), May 2006. Accessed 27 April 2008
  35. ^ "Artists dish it out to the dealers" The Age, 15 June 2007. Accessed 25 April 2008
  36. ^ "Report on the death of the VCA" Farrago, Edition 5, July 2009, p. 28–29.
  37. ^ Smashing jobs, courses and student unions: A 2020 vision? Socialist Alternative, Edition 128, May 2008. Accessed 28 July 2009

External links