REFLECTIONS ON 2021
A second pandemic year, mainly driven by the ‘Delta’ variant of COVID-19 saw Melbourne remain in a rolling series of lockdowns for 262 days. It was a much more difficult, disappointing year, professionally and privately. A planned show was cancelled, even before lockdowns rendered such events purely online affairs. The reasons remain mysterious. I did however participate in a group show titled ‘Don’t Say I Never Warned You, When Your Train Gets Lost’ (from a lyric by Bob Dylan) curated by colleague, Dr Michael Vale (Senior Lecturer in Fine Art, Monash University) at the Stockroom Gallery in Kyneton (7th May – 24th June). Kyneton is a small, gentrified town in Central Victoria. I had not visited it before and was assured it had a quiet reputation for artistic adventure. It was about a two hour drive on a sunny winter’s day through rolling hills of what is now referred to as ‘The Tablelands’. I did not see a single table at large the whole day. The gallery is managed by the charming Magali Gentric and the show comprised seven other artists sharing Vale’s theme of absurdity. The state-wide lockdown somewhat muffled the reception. There was to be a reprise of the show at the Kingston Arts Centre (in suburban Melbourne) in September but that was postponed (due to lockdowns) until April 2022. Some consolation was inclusion in another group show at The Stockroom in June-August 2020 – ‘Every Artist Ever…’
