Artichoke

Meagan Streader

- Words — Emma-kate Wilson Portrait photograph­y — Anne Moffat

By employing light in her sculptural installati­ons, Meagan Streader plays with perception through intersecti­ng forms and glowing hues.

With her installati­ons, Melbourneb­ased artist Meagan Streader considers the social and built environmen­ts to foster experience­s of warmth and collective energy.

“[Light] can affect mood, be immersive or minimal, can be subtle or blinding – influencin­g the mind and body into feeling a range of sensations,” Streader explains.

After graduating from the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane with a Bachelor of Fine Arts/ Visual Arts in 2010, Streader became interested in how she might transform space and dream new realities. “This spilled into installati­on and sculpture, which eventually led me to experiment with light and its effects, and how these materials responded to surroundin­g architectu­re and viewers present,” Streader says.

In 2015, Streader embarked on a three-month residency in New York City, where she was exposed to minimalist and light-and-space artists like James Turrell, Dan Flavin, Stephen Antonakos and Mary Corse. Four years later, after a stint assembling and wiring high-end light fittings for architectu­ral and commercial projects, Streader launched her full-time art career. Her intuitive process directs light with a never-ending material palette of LEDS, fluorescen­ts, lasers, electrolum­inescent tape, glass, acrylic and neon.

The magic of Streader’s oeuvre is most clearly seen when the installati­ons incorporat­e natural light. For example, in Broken Hills (2020) at the Junction Mine on Barkandji Country, Streader carefully positions her work to juxtapose it with the setting or rising sun. The sculpture’s soft pink peaks evoke the natural palette beyond. And in the immersive, site-specific installati­on

Slow Rinse (2019) at Dark Mofo, Streader transforme­d a warehouse into a vision of intersecti­ng light beams. She describes the epic-in-scale artwork as a calming and mesmerizin­g respite from the more hedonistic sensory overload of the festival.

For “Melbourne Now,” scheduled to take place at the National Gallery of Victoria in March 2023, Streader will refine her investigat­ions with a new large-scale installati­on titled Sky Whispers. The work will be 21 metres long by 8 metres high, reflecting the area where light plays through and across the building’s windows and geometric architectu­re.

Inviting a sense of wonder that visually and physically engages audiences with her art, Streader, who is represente­d by MARS Gallery, takes viewers into a place of light phenomena, phenomenol­ogy and space. And with a process centred on exploratio­n, we are left to imagine what might be possible.

 ?? ?? Above — Slow Rinse (2019) was a site-specific installati­on of electrolum­inescent tape at Dark Mofo, Hobart. Photograph­y: Dark Mofo/jesse Hunniford.
Above — Slow Rinse (2019) was a site-specific installati­on of electrolum­inescent tape at Dark Mofo, Hobart. Photograph­y: Dark Mofo/jesse Hunniford.
 ?? ?? Above — Mediating between two desires (pink) (2022), an artwork made from acrylic, textured glass and COB LEDS.
Above — Mediating between two desires (pink) (2022), an artwork made from acrylic, textured glass and COB LEDS.
 ?? ?? Above — Column (extension links) (2022), an artwork made from acrylic and LED neon flex.
Above — Column (extension links) (2022), an artwork made from acrylic and LED neon flex.

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