Michael Lindeman
Michael Lindeman takes us inside his cabinet of curiosities.
As a child I began to collect and present random objects and props in my bedroom, this is something I continue to do as an adult in my studio. Some of the objects informing my work, or even recast as parts of certain works. Others remain as elevated banal items, loitering around the studio with a dormant potential.
The objects operate somewhere between Paul Mccarthy-like performance props, and the found object arrangements of Haim Steinbach. In a way, they are Duchampian readymades, although, their selection does not come from a position of indifference, but rather, a careful choice of absurdist nostalgia.
Exhibition: July 8 - 31, 2021
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PAINTED TIMBER SCULPTURE: In the late 90s while at art school Michael Dagostino and I created Michael & Michael Visual Arts Project Management. It was a roaming parody of a more established cultural organisation, a vehicle for us to present our work with a handful of other artists in various group shows at artist run spaces. Along with being a lot of fun, scheming at the Chamberlain Hotel (The Dingo) and merging our ideas, it was also an opportunity to develop ways of promoting our projects and meeting people in the art scene. Without much explanation while installing our first show at First Draft, Surry Hills in 1998, Dagostino presented each artist with one of these sculptures.
RAMEDLAW POSTER: Ramedlaw is Waldemar in reverse, it was my grandfather’s stage name. More than anyone in my family, I connected most with Waldemar Sylvester Schrenk. He was a creative and confronting oddball who lived with both discipline and free reign. This original poster, circa 1960s, was made to promote one of his tours as a hypnotist.
Waldemar had been a crane operator, door to door salesman, magician, free diver and hypnotist, although I never saw him work a single day. Staying with him on school holidays was an entertaining, educational and unpredictable time. His socks and sandals aesthetic complemented with op shop attire - he was thrifty. Once, he urged my cousin and I to pay for the fuel in his boat when we were 12 years old, before taking us fishing.
After leaving Germany, travel was a way of life for him - viewing his passports was mind bending. Waldemar’s house was full of inventions and mementos. Along with German tapestries, his study was adorned with newspaper clippings featuring him after saving drowning swimmers.
Waldemar was harnessing solar energy well before it became a logical environmental alternative. Dining at his house included fresh seafood such as lobster and abalone, which he had caught. Prior to dinner he would take us for a walk to forage for edible weeds to make a salad.
My opa was curious about my art habits, with no understanding of contemporary art before hearing of my involvement. I think he was some type of artist, or maybe he was art.