Callum Morton
Callum Morton has exhibited nationally and internationally since 1990, and represented Australia at the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007. Morton’s practice explores the personal and social impact of architecture and our built environment, drawing on notions of history, absence, drama and humour. From early drawings of fires and explosions on housing commission flats, to bullet-holed screens, awnings and monuments that memorialise capitalism and outdated forms of modernity, Morton’s works present a melancholic urban archaeology that prompts us to consider the relationship between art and life, history and the present, and look again at the ubiquitous structures we see but rarely notice.
Callum Morton The Underneath
Gadigal Station Sydney Metro, Sydney, 2024
Callum Morton In Through The Out Door
Market Row and Mullins Street, Sydney, 2024
Group Show, What Does the Jukebox Dream Of?
Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2024
Group Show, The First 40 Years
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2024
Group Show, nightshifts
Buxton Contemporary, 2023
Callum Morton View from a Bridge
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2020
Group Show, State of Play
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2017
Group Show
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2016
Group Show, Solid State
Casula Powerhouse, 2015
Callum Morton Monument Park
New Quay, Docklands, Melbourne, 2015
Callum Morton The Other Side
19th Biennale of Sydney, 2014
Callum Morton The Insides
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2012
Mikala Dwyer Before and After Science
Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, 2010
Group Show, Grotto
The Fundament Foundation, Tilburg, The Netherlands, 2009
Callum Morton Wall to Wall
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2009
Callum Morton SCAPE
Christchurch Biennial, 2009
Callum Morton Hotel
Eastlink Freeway, Melbourne, 2008
Group Show, Summer '07 '08
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2007
Callum Morton Valhalla
52nd Venice Biennale, 2007
Callum Morton Piles, Pools and Projections
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2006
Group Show
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2005
Group Show, If these walls could talk
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2005
Callum Morton Babylonia
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne, 2005
Callum Morton Tomorrow Land
Chandigarh Museum and Art Gallery, India, 2004
Callum Morton Stonewash
Istanbul Pedestrian Exhibition 2: Tunel-Karakoy, Turkey, 2004
Callum Morton Habitat
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2003
Group Show, LOCAL +/OR GENERAL
New Canaan, Connecticut, 2003
Group Show, The First 20 Years
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2002
Group Show, Bittersweet
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2002
Callum Morton LOCAL +/OR GENERAL
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2001
Callum Morton Don't Even Ask
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 2000
Callum Morton International Style
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 1999
Group Show, Every other day
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 1998
Callum Morton Cellar
First Floor, Melbourne, 1998
Callum Morton Now & Then
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Zealand, 1997
CALLUM MORTON
Born 1965, Montreal, Canada
Lives Melbourne
EDUCATION & TEACHING
Bachelor of Architecture, RMIT, Melbourne
Bachelor of Fine Arts (Painting), Victoria College, Melbourne
Master of Fine Arts (Sculpture), RMIT, Melbourne
Lecturer in Photography, Media Arts Department, Deakin University
Visiting Instructor, Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, Los Angeles
Artist in Residence, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand
Lecturer, Landscape Architecture, Melbourne University
Lecturer, Sculpture Department, RMIT, Melbourne
Lecturer, Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne
Head of Fine Art, MADA, Melbourne
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
Inside Out, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne, Australia
View from a Bridge, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Monument #32: Helter Skelter, Art Gallery of Ballarat and Alfred Deakin Place, Victoria
Neighbourhood Watch, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
The Insides, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Evacuations, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
Callum Morton - In Memoriam, (curated by Linda Michael) Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
Smokescreen, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
Grotto, The Fundament Foundation, The Netherlands
Wall to Wall, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Through at this & that, Melbourne Art Fair, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
Valhalla, Palazzo Zenobio, 52nd Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
Tomorrowland, Perth Institute of Contemporary Art, Perth; Ballarat Fine Art Gallery; Gippsland Art Gallery, Sale; Dubbo Art Gallery, Dubbo, NSW
Dusk til Dawn, Callum Morton and David Pledger, Arts House, Meat Market, Studio B, North Melbourne
Piles, Pools and Projections, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Callum Morton: Babylonia, Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo
Mini Monuments, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
Tomorrow Land: Callum Morton, Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery, Mornington, Victoria
Babylonia, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne for the Melbourne Arts Festival
Tomorrow Land, Chandigarh Museum and Art Gallery, Chandigarh, India
The Situationist, Statement Stand, Art Basel Miami
The Wishing Well, Gimpel Fils, London
More Talk About Buildings & Mood, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Habitat, Ian Potter Centre, NGV Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Gas and Fuel, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne
The Big Sleep, Karen Lovegrove Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
Local +/or General, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Don't Even Ask, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Malice in Blunderland, Galleri Tommy Lund, Copenhagen, Denmark
International Style, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, Australia
International Style, Santa Monica Museum of Art, Los Angeles
Lockout, CBD, Sydney
Cellar, First Floor, Melbourne
Something more, Teststrip, Auckland, New Zealand
Now and then, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand
Strip, Karyn Lovegrove Gallery, Melbourne
Been there, Artspace, Sydney
The Heights, Karyn Lovegrove Gallery, Melbourne
Cul-de sac, 200 Gertrude Street, Melbourne
Door Door, Room 32, Regents Court Hotel, Sydney
Sanctuary, Critical Cities (Melbourne), Charles Street, Fitzroy, Melbourne
Office, Store 5, Melbourne
View, Post West, Adelaide
Critical City, Adelaide
Window, Prahran Mission Shop, Melbourne
A Dozen Real Fictions, Store 5, Maples Lane, Melbourne
A Dozen Real Fictions (no. 2), Charles William Gallery, RMIT Architecture Department, Melbourne
Tonight the Ritz, Store 5, no. 29, Maples Lane, Melbourne
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
What Does the Jukebox Dream Of? Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
The First 40 Years, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
nightshifts, curated by Hannah Presley and Annika Aitken, Buxton Contemporary Art Museum, Melbourne, Australia
AMPLIFY/ Sydney Contemporary, Carriageworks, Sydney
In the Air as part of Connecting the World through Sculpture, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne
All That Was Solid Melts, Curated by Juliana Engberg, Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand
AUSTRALIA. ANTIPODEAN STORY, Padiglione D'Arte Contemporanea, Milan
Sydney Contemporary, Sydney
Group Show, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney.
Today Tomorrow Yesterday, Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia
21st Century Heide: The Collection since 2000, Heide: Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
Art Basel Hong Kong, Hong Kong
You Imagine What You Desire, 19th Biennale of Sydney, Cockatoo Island, Sydney (curated by Juliana Engberg)
Optical Mix, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Concrete, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne
Conquest of space: science fiction and contemporary art, College of Fine Art Galleries, UNSW, Sydney
Australia, Royal Academy of Arts, London.
Reinventing the Wheel, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne.
Under My Skin: Contemporary Australian Photography from the Corrigan Collection, Rockhampton Art Gallery, Rockhampton
Melbourne Now, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.
I Spy: Windows and Doors in Art, Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery, Hunter Region.
Kindness/Udarta: Australia-India Cultural Exchange, RMIT Gallery, Melbourne
Forever Young: 30 Years of the Heide Collection, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
Adelaide Biennale, Before and After Science, curated by Charlotte Day and Sarah Tutton, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
21st Century: Art in the First Decade, Queensland Art Gallery
Hayman Collection Volume One, Horsham Regional Art Gallery
The Dwelling, ACCA, Melbourne
Stardust, The Fundament Foundation, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
Wandering Lines, Scape Biennial, Christchurch, New Zealand
Lost and Found: An Archeology of the Present, TarraWarra Biennial, curated by Charlotte Day, Healesville, Victoria
The Architects Project, Perth Festival
ARCO O8, Madrid
Revolving Doors: an exhibition in memory of Blair Trethowan, Uplands Gallery, Melbourne
The Library Project, Frankston City Library, Victoria
Cinema Paradiso, ACCA, Melbourne
DeOverkant/Downunder, Den Haag Sculpture 2007, Netherlands
The Unquiet World, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Busan Biennale, Busan, Korea
High Tide: Currents in Contemporary Australian Art, Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland and Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius, Lithuania
Dusk Till Dawn: Callum Morton and David Pledger, Art House Meat Market, Melbourne
Avalon, collaboration with Mutlu Cerkez and Marco Fusinato, Artspace, Sydney
The 2nd Istanbul Pedestrians Exhibition curated by Fulya Erdemci and held between Tünel and Karaköy in Istanbul
If these walls could talk: Tony Clark, Callum Morton, David Noonan, Kathy Temin and Jenny Watson, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Tomorrowland, 11th Indian Triennale, New Delhi, India
Cycle tracks will abound in utopia, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Written with Darkness, UTS Gallery, University of Technology, Sydney
Satellite cities and tabloid life, MUMA Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne
Architypes, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, University of New South Wales, College of Fine Arts, Sydney
PUBLIC/PRIVATE Tumatanui/Tumataiti, 2nd Auckland Triennial, Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand
Architypes, Charles H. Scott Gallery, Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design, Vancouver, Canada
Face Up: Contemporary Art from Australia, Museum for the Present, Nationalgalerie im Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin
Come in: Interior Design as a Contemporary Art in Germany, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand
Stellar, Centre of Contemporary Photography Fundraising Auction, Centre of Contemporary Photography, Melbourne
Twilight, Gimpel Fils, London
Gulliver's Travels, Perth Institute of Contemporary Art, Perth; Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane; Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, Parkside
Architectural Allusions, Callum Morton & Edwin Zwakman, Gimpel Fils, London
Salon des refuses. Progetti di public art mai realizzati, curated by Roberto Pinto, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, Venice, Italy
Fieldwork: Australian Art 1968 - 2002, National Gallery of Victoria, Federation Square, Melbourne
The Heimlich Unheimlich, RMIT University Gallery, Melbourne
People, Places and Ideas, MUMA, Melbourne
Bittersweet, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Nocturne, Mornington Regional Art Gallery, Victoria, Australia
Gulliver's Travels, CAST Gallery, Hobart; Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Sydney; Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
The Armory Show, New York (with Gimpel Fils)
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery - The First 20 Years, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Feature, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand
Lyndal Walker: All New Personal Style, Modern Culture at the Gershwin Hotel, New York
The (Idea)l home Show, Gimpel Fils, London
a person looks at a work of art…, The Michael Buxton Contemporary Art Collection, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Victoria
Longevity, Ian Potter Museum, Melbourne
The Persistence of Pop, The Exhibitions Gallery, Wangaratta
The Retrieved Object, Linden, St Kilda, Melbourne
Rent, Overgaden, Copenhagen, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
August 26, Elastic, Sydney
Slave Pianos: The Compromised Economy of Desire and Fear, Melbourne
Facsimile, Bendigo City Art Gallery, Bendigo, Victoria, Plimsol Gallery, Hobart, Tasmania
Live Acts.Chunky Move @ Revolver, Melbourne
Signs of Life, Melbourne International Biennial, Melbourne
Facsimile, LAC Gallery, Caracas, Venezuela
The Queen is Dead, Stills Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland
The Persistence of Pop, Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
Everybody Knows. Care of Space d'arte contemporanea and gallery, Openspace, Milan, Italy
Strolling: the art of arcades, boulevards, barricades, publicity, Museum of Modern Art at Heide, Melbourne
Every Other Day, Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney
Snapshot, First Floor, Melbourne
Proscenium, Artspace, Auckland, New Zealand
Rough Trade, Plimsol Gallery Centre For the Arts, Hobart, Tasmania
Rough Trade, The Tanks, Cairns, Australia
Seppelt Contemporary Art Award, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Power Corruption and Lies, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane
World Speak Dumb, Karyn Lovegrove Gallery, Melbourne
Art <=> Advertising, Robert Lindsay Gallery, Melbourne
Power Corruption and Lies / New Order Factory Records 1981, Plotz Gallery, Brisbane
The Expanded Field (with Danius Kesminas and Anna Nervegna), 200 Gertrude St, Melbourne
S.W.I.M. 2 Fund Raiser, Project Space, RMIT Building 94
Ruins in Reverse. RMIT Gallery, Melbourne
Technology Compost (with Damp), organised by Geoff Lowe, Adelaide Festival, Adelaide
Perspectives: 200 Gertrude Street 1985-1995, 200 Gertrude Street, Melbourne
The Object of Existence, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Monash University Art Prize, Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
Suddenly, collaboration with Kathy Temin, The Building 40 Project, RMIT, Melbourne
Lyndal Walker and Callum Morton, First Floor, Melbourne
Australian Perspecta, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Videonnale # 6, Bonn, Germany
Slide, 200 Gertrude Street, Melbourne
Projection: Filming the Body, The Basement Project, Melbourne
Passage: Spatial Interventions, Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
Loop: Part One - A Critical Cities Project, Longford Cinema, Melbourne
The Exact Moment, A Critical Cities Project, Melbourne
Store 5 Fundraiser, Maples Lane, Melbourne
S.W.I.M. Fund Raiser, Linden Gallery, Melbourne
Sight Regained: Fred Hollows Fund Raiser, Westpac Gallery, Arts Centre, Melbourne
#100, Store 5, Maples Lane, Melbourne
Magasin 5, Cannibal Pierce Galerie Australienne, Paris, France
March On! (#2) (collaboration with Rose Nolan), Store 5, Melbourne
S.W.I.M Fund Raiser, Linden Gallery, Melbourne
W.T. Rawleigh Building, Northcote, Melbourne
Duet, Collaboration with Kathy Temin, Store 5, no 62, Melbourne
Where Art Ends, Nature Begins, Store 5, # 62, Melbourne
# 31, A3-20, Store 5, Melbourne
#11, A3-10, Store 5, Melbourne
COMMISSIONS
Come Away With Me to the End of the World, Malthouse Theatre, Melbourne and Samuel Beckett Theatre, Dublin
Aarhus 2017, Aarhus, Denmark
Endgame, Melbourne Theatre Company (MTC)
Monument Park, NewQuay Promenade, Docklands
Set design for Other Desert Cities, Melbourne Theatre Company, Melbourne
Silverscreen, Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne
Grotto, pavilion for De Oude Warande, Fundament Foundation, Netherlands
Hotel, Connect East, Eastlink Freeway, Melbourne.
Valhalla, Palazzo Zenobio, 52nd Venice Biennale, Venice
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ben Neutze, ‘A giant Trump head has popped up in Sydney’, Time Out Sydney, 31 August 2018
Susan Gibb, 'Australia,' Art Asia Pacific Almanac 2015, Volume X, pp 95-8
Amita Kirpalani, 'Engaging Critically, Intensively and Persistently: Callum Morton', Art and Australia, Issue 51 No.4, 2014, pp. 496-500
Stephanie Convery, “Feature : Callum Morton”, Inside MTC, February 20 2013
Amanda Woodward, 'Art Under 5k', Australian Art Collector, pp 106
Stuart Harrison, 'Callum Morton: the Real and the Virtual Together', AR 125: Architecture and the Arts, 2012
Helen Hughes, 'Aestheticising Architecture / Architecturalising Aesthetics: Callum Morton and Bianca Hester'. Discipline # 2. Autumn
Doug Hall, “The Best of Contemporary Australian Art”, The Monthly, October 2012
Raymond Gill, 'Leaders of the pack: the artists who matter', The Sunday Age-Extra, November 13, pp16-17
Charlotte Day, 'MUMA on the move', Art & Australia, Issue 48 No. 2, pp. 252-255
Ken Scarlett, 'No stopping on the freeway!', Australian Art Review, August-October, 2008, pp. 34-36
Charlotte Day, Lost and Found: An Archeology of the Present, exh.cat., TarraWarra Museum of Art
Current, Contemporary Art from Australia and New Zealand, Art and Australia (eds.), Sydney, p220
Andrew Mackenzie, ‘Broken Homes’, Broadsheet, June 2007, pp 85 -87
Marco Marcon, ‘The Grand Tour 2007,’ Eyeline, Number 64, pp24-28
Sebastian Smee, ‘Venice Biennale,’ Artistprofile, Spring 2007, pp61-62
Daniel Palmer, ‘Venice Biennale: Asia and Australasia,’ Frieze, Issue 109, September 2007, p133
Callum Morton, 2007 Venice Biennale Project, Art & Australia, Winter 2007
Stuart Koop and Callum Morton, U3 Venice Biennale Australia 2007, Melbourne University Press, 2007, pp. 108-153
‘Venice Biennale 2007, Callum Morton’s Valhalla’, TATE ETC. http://www.tate.org.uk/tateetc/news/venice2007/callummorton.htm, 07/2007
Richard Dorment, ‘The best Venice for years,’ The Telegraph, 12/06/2007, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/06/12/babiennale112.xml
‘Australian Pavilion – Callum Morton,’ E-Flux, 03/12/07, http://www.e-flux.com/displayshow.php?file=message_1173475464.txt
Sheehy, Brett, ‘Callum Morton’ in Finalists in Arts and Entertainment for The Bulletin’s ‘Smart 100: Australia’s Best and Brightest’, The Bulletin, June 26, 2007, p.50
Megan Backhouse, ‘Finding space on a crowded canvas,’ The Age, June 16, http://www.theage.com.au/news/arts/finding-space-on-a-crowded-canvas/2007/06/14/1181414461988.html
John McDonald, ‘Festival of False Gods,’ Sydney Morning Herald, June 16 – 17, p.17
Sebastian Smee, ‘Visions of Life and Death in Venice,’ The Australian, 9 June, http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21873561-16947,00.html
Sebastian Smee, ‘Aussie Artist takes his Valhalla to Venice’, The Australian, Friday June 8, 2007 p.7
Andrew Frost, ‘Callum Morton’, Australian Art Collector: 50 Most Collectable Artists 2007, Issue 39, January – March 2007, pp. 146 – 147
Megan Backhouse, ‘An imagining of the Taliban at work in Toorak’, Sydney Morning Herald, 7 March, p. 16
Jane Ryan, ‘Interview with Callum Morton,’ The Australian Financial Review Magazine, 23 February, p. 22
Robert Bevan, 'art & events,' Vogue Living Australia, January/February 2007, pp. 69 - 72
The Unquiet World, exh. cat., Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Emily Dunn, 'Tent embassy goes global as Venice sees Australia in three dimensions', The Sydney Morning Herald, Wednesday, May 24, 2006 p. 15
High Tide: new currents in art from Australia and New Zealand, exh. cat., Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius and Poland, Warsaw
Anthony Gardner, ‘Babylonia’, Commentary in Broadsheet, Vol. 34, No. 4, Dec. 2005 – Feb. 2006 p. 244
Katrina Strickland, ‘The Face: Meeting Artist Callum Morton’, The Weekend Australian, October 1-2, 2005 p. R3
Margaret Marsh, Michele Watts and Craig Malyon A.R.T. 2 practice, Oxford University Press, Melbourne 2005, p. 210-12
Engberg, Juliana, ‘The Body in the Box: Callum Morton and James Angus’, Art and Australia, Vol. 42, No. 4, 2005, pp. 580 - 587
Callum Morton, Stuart Koop and Vikram Prakash, Lalit Kala Akademi, ‘Tomorrow Land, 11th Triennale India’, 2005
Gallerie d’Art & Co, ‘A Bocca Aperte: In Australia ‘’arte riesce a togliere il fiato,’’
Andrew Frost, ‘Gunslinger Shots: Le Corbusier,’ state of the arts, Jan-Mar 05, pg 102
Maxilmillien de Lafayette, ‘Art Today: People and Events - The XIth Triennale of India: an International Art Treasure,’ Art & Style Magazine
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‘New Delhi’s Art Triennale builds bridges between nations of the world,’ Channel News Asia, 23 January, http://fecolumnists.expressindia.com/print.php?content_id=80463
Australian artist exhibits images inspired by Le Corbusier’s architectural designs for Chandigarh, news release, Australian High Commission New Delhi, 13 January
Aditi Tandon, ‘Morton’s prints bring irony alive in city’s space alive,’ Chandigarh Tribune, (India), Wednesday, January 12
‘To ‘Tomorrow Land’ and beyond,’ Arts Hub Australia, http://www.artshub.com.au, January 12
‘Callum Morton takes Tomorrow Land to the 11th Indian Triennale,’ Australia Council Media Releases, 11 January, http://ozco.gov.au/news_and_hot_topics/media_releases/
Aditi Tandon, ‘Artist uses cinema to revisit Chandigarh’s architectural complexity,’ Tribune News Service, Chandigarh, India, January 9
Juliana Engberg, Babylonia, exh. cat. Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne
Anthony Downey, ‘Callum Morton,’ Flash Art, London Eye, Nov-Dec 04, No 239, p. 73
Stuart Koop, Vikram Prakash and Callum Morton, Tomorrow Land, exh. cat., 11th Indian Triennale, New Delhi, India
Georgina Safe, ‘Where icons meet irony,’ The Australian, Monday August 2, 2004, p.7 (Arts)
‘Callum Morton parks new work at 11th Indian Triennale,’ Australia Council:News + Hot Topics, Media Releases, 26 July’ http://www.ozco.gov.au/news_and_hot_topics/media_releases/callum_morton_parks_new_work_at_11th_indian_triennale/
Stephen Naylor, ‘Public/Private - Tumatanui/Tumataiti, The 2nd Auckland Triennial,’ Art Monthly Australia, # 170, June 2004, p. 16 – 18
‘Recent Exhibitions Selected by Max Delany: Callum Morton Oh Brigitte, 2001 - Anna Schwartz Gallery,’ Art & Australia, Vol. 41 No. 4, Winter 2004, p. 601
Claudia Wahjudi, ‘Face up – Xeitgenösshiche Kunst aus Australien,’ Austellungen, Kunstforum International, Bd. 168, 01/02/2004
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Susan Best, ‘Sound and Light Humour: Callum Morton’s art practice uses humour to interrogate questions of function and architecture,’ Architecture Australia, Jan-Feb
Stuart Koop, More Talk About Buildings & Mood, exh. cat., Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
Astrid Mania, ‘Strike a Pose: Australia Gives Good Face at Berlin’s Hamburger Bahnhoff,’ Broadsheet, Vol 32 # 4, p15-16
Patricia Anderson, ‘The secret life of houses - Callum Morton: More Talk about Buildings and Mood,’ The Australian, 20 December
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Max Delaney, ‘Skeletons in the closet: from the monument to the model – sculpture in the Collection,’ Monash University Collection: Four Decades of Collecting, ed. Jenepher Duncan and Linda Michael, Monash University and Monash University Museum of Art, Victoria, 2003, p. 45 – 51
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Margaret Plant, ‘The Journey from Field to Fieldwork 1968 – 2003,’ Eyeline # 51, Autumn – Winter, 2003, p. 44 – 46
Pat Nourse, ‘Spatial Relations: Callum Morton’s art injects humanity into modernist architecture’s cold white boxes,’ Black + White #69, 2003, p. 10
Edward Colless, ‘Callum Morton: Interior World,’ Australian Art Collector, issue 25, July – September, p.46 - 49
Ashley Crawford, ‘Melbourne Gothic,’ Australian Art Collector, issue 24, April – June, p.86 – 89
Megan Backhouse, ‘A model artist,’ The Age, Saturday, 31 May, 2003
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Stuart Koop, ‘Groundhog Day,’ Callum Morton: Habitat, exh. cat., Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne
Daniel Palmer, ‘Callum Morton,’ Frieze, Issue 72, Jan – Feb 2003, p. 106
Davina Jackson, ‘21st Century House-Museum,’ Australian Art Collector (Collector Profile: Yueji & Corbett Lyon), Issue 23, Jan – Mar 2003, p. 44 - 47
Stephanie Radok, ‘The Point of Knowing,’ in Samstag Scholarship, exh. cat., University of South Australia, 2003
http://www.vceart.com/artists/morton/index.html
‘Face up to Australian Art’ (Hamburger Bahnhof, bis 4. Januar 2003), http://www.schwarzau.de/ausstellungen/berlin.htm
Dominque Angeloro, ‘If it’s rockin’’, The Sydney Morning Herald, November, 14-20, 2003, p.26
Juliana Engberg, The Heimlich Unhemlich, exh. cat., Melbourne Festival Visual Arts Programme
Simon Rees, 'Bittersweet' at the Art Gallery of New South Wales,' ArtText, no. 78 Fall 2002, p. 90, 91
Wayne Tunnicliffe Bittersweet, exh. cat., Art Gallery of New South Wales
Linda Michael, People, Places and Ideas, exh. cat., MUMA, Melbourne
Nicolas Hubicki, 'Conning Icons,' Architectural Review Australia, Spring 2002, p. 20, 21
Sylvia Katz, 'Learning from Callum Morton,' Arbitare 420, September 2002, p. 122
Stuart Koop, Gulliver's Travels, exh. cat., CAST Gallery, touring exhibtions
Stuart Koop Crudelia ? Anno 11 nr.1 - Gennalo -Marzo 2001
Greg Burke, Feature - art, life & cinema, exh. cat., Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Zealand
Stuart Koop International Style, Monument #41, 2001, p. 94 -97
Larissa Hjorth, 'Mortgage,' Broadsheet Vol 29 no 4. Dec 2000. p.16
D.J.Huppatz, 'Rent,' Like # 13. Summer 2000, p 61 - 62
Callum Morton, The Retrieved Object, exh. cat., Linden Gallery, Melbourne
Monument, 'Not the Musical,' Monument #36, June/July, 2000, p.30
Dawn Fulcher and Max Andrews, 'Rent,' Contemporary Visual Arts, Issue 29, 2000, p. 84
Briony Rhodes Facsimile, Eyeline, # 42, Autumn/Winter 2000
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Modern Institute Melbourne, Glasgow, Edinburgh, exh. cat. Cultural exchange project
Max Delany, ‘Raising the Dead, An Interview with Callum Morton,’ Like Art Magazine, No 10, Summer 1999, p. 20-25
Clayton Campbell, ‘Callum Morton, Santa Monica Museum of Art,’ Flash Art International, Vol.xxx11 no 208, October 1999, p117
Daniel Palmer, ‘Signs of Life, Melbourne International Biennial,’ Frieze, #48, Oct 1999, p100-101
Stuart Koop, ‘Signs of Life, Melbourne International Biennial,’ Art /Text #67, p86
Susan Stewart, ‘Art and the Experience of Time,’ Like, No 9, Winter 1999
Stuart Koop, ‘What’s In the Box ?,’ catalogue essay in Mixed Business, The Work of Callum Morton
Juliana Engberg, Signs of Life, exh. cat., Melbourne International Biennial
Elisabeth Mahoney, ‘The Queen is Dead,’ Untitled #19
Nicky Bird, ‘Hot in the City, The Queen is Dead, Where the Wild Roses Grow,’ Art Monthly, UK, March
Peter Timms, ‘Pop reveals its simple powers of persistence,’ The Age, 24th March, p19
Zara Stanhope, The Persistence of Pop, Works from the Monash University Collection
Karen Burns, ‘Urban Unease: The Work of Callum Morton,’ Backlogue, Vol 3.
Rachel Kent, ‘Strolling,’ Art and Text, #64, p93-94
David Cross, ‘Strolling: The art of arcades, boulevards, barricades, publicity,’ LIKE, #7, Summer, p. 46-47
Clayton Campbell, ‘LA’s Bergamot Station Arts Center’, Object Magazine, p. 50-1
'Everybody Knows,' Artfan #8
Max Delany, 'Strolling: the art of arcades, boulevards, barricades, publicity,' exh. cat., Museum of Modern Art at Heide
Adam Geczy, 'Not so fine art,' Art Monthly #112, August
Stuart Koop, ‘Three Quarter Time,’ interview with Callum Morton from Seppelt Contempoary Art Award catalogue, MCA
Giovanni Intra, now and then, exh. cat., Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Zealand
Rex Butler, ‘Slow Apocalypse,’ in Power, Corruption and Lies, exh. cat., IMA, Brisbane
Lara Travis, ‘World Speak Dumb,’ LIKE, #2
Deborah Hennessy, ‘Art Lover’s Lost Highway,’ Broadsheet, Vol 26, # 2, Winter =
World Speak Dumb, exh. cat., Karyn Lovegrove Gallery
Christopher Chapman, ‘Sculpture Snapshots,’ Photofile, #99
Evan Maloney, ‘Consuming Art,’ Art Monthly, #99
Mark Pennings, ‘Bright Shiny and New,’ art<=> advertising, catalogue essay
Simon Cooper, 'The expanded field,' LIKE #1
Stuart Koop, interviewing Callum Morton, Been There, exh. cat., Artspace, Sydney, November
David Cross, 'The expanded field,' Art and Text, # 55
Robert Schubert, 'Ruins in reverse,' Art and Text, # 55
Natalie King, 'Building 40 Project,' Art and Australia, vol 33, no 4
Susan Fereday, Ruins in reverse, exh. cat., RMIT Gallery
Carolyn Barnes, Perspectives, An Historical Perspective, exh. cat., 200 Gertrude Street
Claire Williamson, Object of Existence, exh. cat., ACCA
Max Delany, Callum Morton: Belvedere, Australian Perspecta 95, exh. cat., Art Gallery of New South Wales
Alex Pittendrigh & Mutlu Çerkez, Callum Morton and Lyndal Walker
Judy Annear, 'The Making of Australian Perspecta,' Art Monthly, no 75
Natalie King, 'Hothouse Varieties,' Art & Asia Pacific, vol 2, no 2
Stuart Koop, 'Real Model World,' Art & Text, no 52, pp 36-38
Circular #3, February
Sandra Bridie, ‘The Exact Moment,’ Critical Cities, Melbourne
Natalie King, Passage: Spatial Interventions, exh. cat., Monash University Gallery, May
Sandra Bridie, ‘Introduction to Critical Cities,’ Critical Cities, March
Artfan #2 Office
M. Holden, Cul-de-sac, exh. cat., 200 Gertrude Street, June
E. Pierini, ‘Passage: Spatial Interventions,’ Broadsheet, vol 23, no 2, Winter
Marie Sierra-Hughes, ‘Cul-de-Sac,’ Agenda, # 38, September
F. Coleman, ‘Passage,’ Agenda, # 38, September
M. Holden, ‘Loop: Part One,’ Agenda, #38, September
Artfan #3/4, ‘Loop: Part One,’ Melbourne, no 3/4
H. Smorgan, ‘Loop: Part One,’ Photofile, # 43
Chris McAuliffe, ‘Next Wave Festival,’ Art and Australia, vol 32, no 2
T. Mathieson, ‘More Next Wave Festival,’ Art and Australia, vol 32, no 2
F. Coleman, ‘Next Wave Festival,’ Art &Text, # 49
Nicholas Baume, ‘Room 32,’ Art &Text, #50
Kirsten Thompson Charles William Gallery Review, Transition # 36/37, 1991
NEWSPAPER REVIEWS
Megan Backhouse, ‘Artist commissioned’, March, www.theage.com.au
Murata Yuko, ‘Architypes’, http://www.realtokyo.co.jp/english/ May
Robert Nelson, ‘Cycle Tracks Will Abound in Utopia,’ The Age, Sept 1
Elizabeth Farrelly, ‘All the world’s a designer stage,’ Sydney Morning Herald (Metropolitan), Tuesday, 20 January, p. 13
Susan Shineberg, 'In the jaws of Berlin's Great Whites, a taste of Australia,' The Age, 4 October
Susan Shineberg, 'Triumph in the teeth of adversity,' The Sydney Morning Herald, 6 October
Von Thomas Joerdens, 'Poppig und gefährlich,' Oranienburger Generalanzeiger, 7 October
Patricia Anderson, 'The Secret Life of Houses,' The Australian, Saturday, 20 December
Lenny Ann Low, 'Miniaturisation with mischief demands detailed look,' Sydney Morning Herald, Metropolitan, Wednesday, October 29, p. 16
Shirley Apthorp, 'Urban work smashes cliches: Berlin is set to experience the cutting edge of Australian art,' The Australian, Tuesday, 30 September 2003, p. 15
Peter Hill, 'Made to measure', Review in Spectrum, The Sydney Morning Herald, December 13-14, 2003, pp. 10 - 11
Robert Nelson, 'Viewers take ride back into the future,' The Age, Sat. 30 November, p. 29
John Mangan, 'Party time for an art gallery with a split,' The Age, November 25, 2002, p. 3
Gabriella Coslovich, 'Gas and Fuel towers are back, in miniature and on site,' The Age, November 23, 2002, p. 6
Megan Backhouse, 'Callum Morton, cooking with gas,' The Age, October 2, 2002, p. 6 (The Culture)
Robert Nelson, The Age, Saturday, September 28, 2002
Benjamin Genocchio, 'Twitchy escapist impulses,' The Weekend Australian, May 4-5
Susan McCulloch-Vehlin, 'Lunar Dreaming,' Weekend Australian, Saturday, April 20
Holly Myers, 'An intimate trip to dreamland,' LA Times, February 5
Benjamin Genocchio, 'Building on lurid fantasies,' The Weekend Australian, 12-13 January
Robert Nelson, 'Seeing is Believing,' The Age, Friday November 24
Robert Nelson, 'Someone Elses Home is Where this Art is,' Sunday Age, September 3
Megan Backhouse, 'Hybrid Forms under the Spotlight,' The Age, Wednesday, 26 July, p.7
Alison Barclay, '2020 visionaries, Who will be the leading Australian artist of the future?' Herald Sun, Saturday, January 8, p.104
William Wilson, 'Oversized Comments on Society, Success,' Los Angeles Times, July 22
Yasmin Monsalve, 'La cultura de la copia ilega desde Australia,' El Universal, July
Edgar Alfonzo-Sierra, 'Facsimile: Australia en copias,' El Nacional, June 30
Bruce James, 'Hitting the Poor Snail on the Head', The Sydney Morning Herald, June 19, p.13
Joanna Murray-Smith, 'The Freedom to Pursue the Art of the Matter,' The Age, 13 June
Anna Clabburn, 'Plentiful Life Signs,' The Age, June 9
Robert Rooney, 'A little chaos, but definite life signs,' The Australian, Sunday, May
Peter Timms, 'Biennale plays it safe,' The Age, May
Ashley Crawford, 'Signs of Strife,' The Age, May 8
Peter Timms, 'Pop reveals its simple powers of persistence,' The Age, March 24
Anna Clabburn, 'Three strolling artists lead the way at MOMA,' The Age, Nov 11
Sebastian Smee, Sydney Morning Herald, Sept 29
Myfawny Warhurst, 'Strolling Along,' The Age, Saturday Extra, Oct 24
Robert Rooney, 'Everyday is deja vu Day in Suburbia,' The Australian, Oct 16
TJ McNamara, 'Neo-Romantic Revival,' Art Monthly
Peter Hill, 'Moonlighting for Jacks of All Trades,' The Australian, March 6
Adrian Martin, Art Collector
Susan McCulloch, ‘Architectural bent puts Morton in the frame,’ The Australian, Nov 21
Giles Auty, ‘But Who Picked the Jury ?,’ The Weekend Australian, Nov 15-16
Bruce James Galleries, Sydney Morning Herald, Nov 14
Rebecca Lancashire, ‘When is an art prize not an art prize ?,’ The Age, July 16
Angela Bennie, ‘A Toast to final five,’ The Sydney Morning Herald, July15
Mark Birch, ‘ New artist-in-residence is closer to deciding New Plymouth Project,’ Daily News, New Plymouth, June 27
Robert Rooney, ‘Art-Advertising,’ The Australian, March
Anna Johnson, ‘Young At Art,’ Good Weekend, April 26
Bruce James, Sydney Morning Herald, Nov
Robert Rooney, '….Expanded Field,' The Australian, Melbourne, 24 May
Robert Nelson, 'Fire in a Prestigious Underbelly,' The Age, Melbourne, 15 May
Robyn Mckenzie, 'Balcony Sculpture,' The Age, Melbourne, 25 October
Robert Rooney, 'Melbourne Art,' The Australian, Melbourne, 17 October
Bruce James, 'Perspecta exhibition a hybrid exploration,' The Age, Melbourne, 10 February
Elwyn Lynn, 'Framed witnesses defend Perspecta,' The Australian, Melbourne,10 February
VIDEO ART
Callum Morton Four Works, video document
Twister, For Live Acts with Shelley Lassica, Chunky Moves Performances at Revolver
The Expanded Field, video documentation
Loop: Part One
PAGE ART
Artfan #8, Everybody Knows, 1998
Practice #3, Artist Pages, 1998
Artfan #7, Rock On, Guest Editor.1998
Circular # 6, September, 1997
Artfan #5, Cover, Autumn 1995
Agenda #35, Cover, 1993
Circular #1, May, 1993
Circular #2, October 1993
Agenda #13/14, Artists Page: Artists Wallpaper Supplement
PRIZES
Seppelt Contemporary Art Award
Monash University Inaugural Art Awards, 1995
GRANTS
Samstag Scholarship, University of South Australia
New Work Grant, Arts Victoria
New Work Grant, Arts Victoria
Professional development grant, Arts 21, Arts Victoria
New Work Grant, Australia Council
New Work Grant, Australia Council
COLLECTIONS
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth
Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand
Museum of Old and New Art (MONA), Tasmania
Monash University Gallery, Melbourne
Corbett and Yueji Lyon Collection
Ferriers, Sydney
Goldman Sachs JB Were
Artbank
Minter Ellison
The Michael Buxton Collection
MONA Collection
Private Collections locally and internationally
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