Past Residents

Residents Map

Thomas Tronel-Gauthier

Thomas Tronel-Gauthier’s multifaceted sculptural practice involves both objects and installations. He questions materials, and merges painting, photography, and video. His work focuses on the origins, mutations and variations of form. Tronel-Gauthier captures natural and spontaneous phenomena in his work, while taking a nuanced approach to ephemerality and durability.

Thomas Tronel-Gauthier (born 1982, Paris) lives and works in Paris. His recent solo exhibitions include Le temps d’un sillage (The time it takes a wake to disappear), Bullukian Foundation, Lyon, France, 2016; OFFICIELLE, FIAC–International Contemporary Art Fair, Cité de la mode et du design, Paris, France, 2015; Ce que j’ai vu n’existe plus (What I have seen no longer exist), Gallery 22,48 m², Paris, France, 2015; and AN ECHO, A STONE, Gallery My monkey, Nancy, France, 2016.

Past Resident
2016: Creative Australia

John Aslanidis

Since the 1990s, John Aslanidis has been the exploring the relationship between sound and vision through painting. Influenced by the field of electronic music, Aslanidis was a member of Clan Analogue, a collective of sound and visual artists during the 1990s. He has further explored this sound-vision fusion through collaborations with sound artists and sound/painting installations, which have been exhibited in Melbourne, Sydney, New York and Berlin.

John Aslanidis lives and works in Melbourne. His recent exhibitions include Eye Score: The Audible Image, Hawthorn Arts Centre, Melbourne, 2015; Color Music, Drill Hall Gallery, Australian National University, Canberra, 2014; The Sharper Image, Ethan Cohen Fine Arts, New York, 2013; Emergence and Structure, Lafayette College, Museum of Art + Design Freedom Tower at Miami Dade College, University Gallery, University of Florida, Gainesville, 2012. In 2012, Aslanidis was commissioned for a large-scale painting by the Arts Centre Melbourne for the Hammer Hall titled Sonic Network no. 11.

 

Guillermo Mora

Guillermo Mora works primarily in sculpture and painting. He thinks about his practice as a process of adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing. Mora’s recent work looks at the forgotten histories of painting and specifically concealment, overlapping and disappearance.

Guillermo Mora (born 1980, Spain) received a BFA from the Complutense University of Madrid and the School of Art Institute of Chicago, and completed his PhD from La Caixa Foundation. Mora was featured in 100 Painters of Tomorrow by Thames & Hudson, awarded the Audemars Piguet Award in 2013, and received a fellowship from the Spanish Royal Academy in Rome in 2010–2011. His exhibitions include El Escritorio Circular, Centre d’art la Panera, Lleida, Spain, 2016; Cae el Cielo, ECCO, Cádiz, Spain, 2015; No A Trio, La Casa Encendida, Madrid, 2013; and Viaje Largo con un Extraño, Casa Triângulo Gallery, São Paulo, 2011. Mora’s work is part of the Caldic Collection and The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse. Mora is currently represented by Casa Triângulo Gallery in São Paulo.