Melbourne s galleries back in full swing
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Melbourne s galleries back in full swing
By Tiarney Miekus
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Slime and Ashes.
Through glitz, strangeness and adorableness,
Slime and Ashes shows how the experience of both cuteness and the uncanny those moments which are paradoxically both compelling and repelling is one of our most dominant aesthetic experiences. The show encompasses painting, drawing, video and sculpture to consider how cuteness, and how anthropomorphising non-human characters, can conjure feelings of irresolvable ambivalence. In this way the cartoon-influenced drawings of Keely (Kaymay) Hallas, the soft sculpture aliens of Terry Williams, and the life-size waxed wood sculpture of a mother and baby pig by Abdul-Rahman Abdullah show how cute isn’t trivial but something more complex that borders the uncanny. In a very humourous exhibition take Bronwyn Hack’s