Qantas

GEORGE BYRNE

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During a recent trip to Montreal, Canada, Sydney-born artist George Byrne walked up the same street twice a day for a month before he “started noticing an image coming to life on this piece of sidewalk”. Only then did he consider taking his first photograph in the city. “That was a classic example of how long it takes for me to marinate in a place before I’ve got something to work with.”

Which may surprise anyone who has followed his career. In the six years he’s been “doing this and nothing else”, Byrne, the older brother of actor Rose Byrne, has held more than 10 solo exhibition­s, released a book, Post Truth, and garnered attention around the globe (including some 130,000 Instagram followers) for his dreamy takes on mundane urban settings.

Moving to Los Angeles a decade ago set Byrne, who graduated from Sydney College of the Arts in 2001 before turning his attention to music, on this path. “Through the landscape of that city, I found my muse,” he says, adding that his early photograph­s were documentin­g his new environmen­t “in a fairly straight way”. But, he says, “as I’ve gone on I’ve tried to push the photograph­s towards a painterly, impression­istic style. It’s new topographi­c urban surrealism, photo assemblage – and ‘phainting’.”

For his latest exhibition, Innervisio­ns (at Olsen Gallery in Sydney until 13 November; olsengalle­ry.com), and with the pandemic ruling out travel to capture new work, Byrne drew on his existing photograph­s from Los Angeles, Miami and Sydney. “I was suddenly having to source my inspiratio­n from my own head, as opposed to the physical world. There are certain images that point to how I was feeling at the time. Some of them are quite joyful, some of them a little more foreboding and there’s this hint of anxiety flowing through.”

But, he adds, it’s all subjective – and therein lies the payoff. “Whenever I have a show, many people get right up close, looking for the division between what is real and what isn’t.”

 ?? ?? Not quite photograph­y, not quite painting – this Australian artist’s work inhabits a surreal space between two mediums.
Not quite photograph­y, not quite painting – this Australian artist’s work inhabits a surreal space between two mediums.

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