Rodney Glick
Project team: Made Lena, Claire Evans, Chris Hill, Sohan Ariel Hayes
Everyone No.9
2006-08
Carved and painted wood
210 x 70 x 70 cm
Photo: Tony Nathan
Rodney Glick and Lynnette Voevodin
I Love Animals and Most of Nature - Feral Pig
2008
Tanned pelt, artificial flowers
30 x 115 x 160cm
While there was no concern or offence taken regarding the depiction of Westerners in godlike poses, there was some confusion about what these sculptures actually were. At one stage Leno took me aside and asked me to explain what Rodney was doing, why was he having these strange objects made and what did they mean. It is a reasonable question from anyone, but particularly understandable from someone like Leno who is used to making finely crafted objects for some clearly defined purpose. In reply to his question I said that I had no idea what Rodney was doing, but we both then agreed that we could see that these works were significant, that they had an element of humour but also invited serious contemplation and triggered a variety of associations. Had my Indonesian language skills been adequate, I would have gone on to suggest to Leno that art is often hard to pin down or categorise, and that artworks are not like puzzles or conundrums where you have to find the meaning and then it all makes sense.
Good artworks are ambiguous and open ended, and how they are experienced will depend on the personal experience, knowledge and cultural background that individuals approach them with. I have been around the Everyone sculptures for so long and seen them in every different stage of construction that when people ask why they have multiple arms, it simply seems like an odd question, and it is hard for me to imagine the response of someone seeing them for the first time. It is also hard to imagine how they would be experienced by someone from a quite different culture, with a different set of beliefs and a different understanding of the nature of art. Whilst individual experiences will differ, most will agree that these works have an almost majestic presence, a sort of charisma, and that they are imbued with dignity and pathos.
Chris Hill, 2008
In the new work, I love animals and most of nature Glick and Voevodin have placed the pelts of feral animals a cat, fox, boar and camel in the gallery simultaneously exhibiting them as both specimen and trophy. The artwork builds on past design and manufacture of domestic furniture in which the feral animal pelts hint at landscape, oppression, hardship and death. The various flowers placed on the pelts shifts meaning away from the actual objects opening up opportunities for contemplation on other aspects surrounding our existence. The imagery of feral animals raises questions about the interdependence of man and beast implying a masculine violence behind a mask of heroic conquest.

