Chaos & Order: 120 years of collecting at RMIT

Chaos & Order: 120 years of collecting at RMIT

For the first time in 120 years RMIT is presenting a survey exhibition sourced entirely from its permanent art collection, more than half of which has never been shared with the public before.

Kawita Vatanajyankur The Scale of Justice, 2015, by artist and RMIT alumnus Kawita Vatanajyankur

Chaos & Order: 120 years of collecting at RMIT (13 April–9 June) at RMIT Gallery showcases a wide range works by some of Australia’s most influential contemporary artists, such as Howard Arkley, Polly Borland, Emily Floyd, Sam Jinks, Reko Rennie, Helga Groves, Yhonnie Scarce, Christian Thompson, Kawita Vatanajyankur, and Ah Xian. 

The RMIT Art Collection is a testament to the skill, workmanship and innovation of RMIT alumni, who rank among the country’s most highly-regarded artists. Many of Australia’s great modern artists taught or trained at RMIT, including Robert Jacks, Inge King, Jan Senbergs, George Johnson and Roger Kemp.

However, the majority of the collection, valued at over $9 million, has been kept in storage, offices and meeting rooms, or is on loan to other museums and galleries.

Chaos & Order celebrates the collection’s range and diversity, featuring artists who work in different mediums, engage in diverse narratives, and have distinctive histories and identities.

Curator Jon Buckingham said the RMIT Art Collection tells the history of the University and its creative output.

“Unlike substantial private collections available to the public, a university collection can afford to present work that is academically based, experimental and not necessarily always crowd-pleasing,” he said.

To Bear and Behold, 2009 Southern Cross – To Bear and Behold, 2009, by Jill Orr.

Collaborating closely with RMIT Creative, the exhibition extends onto two levels, with a temporary lower ground area dedicated to seven works from the RMIT Sonic Arts Collection and a large commissioned wallpaper design by alumnus Reko Rennie.

While the collection represents a living archive of the University’s creative endeavours, students seldom have the chance to directly benefit from working with it. In order to rectify this Buckingham worked with six students from RMIT’s Master of Arts (Arts Management) to form the central vision for the exhibition.

Valerie Sim moved from Singapore to study Arts Management and worked on the exhibition as part of her course.

“When I first came to RMIT I didn’t even know we had an art collection,” she said.

“I have spent the past three months thinking on my feet, working as a team and actually handling artworks in a gallery rather than just learning theory.” 

Story: Evelyn Tsitas

Evelyn Tsitas Practical experience: Valerie Sim with artist Juan Ford’s confrontational work Degenerator, 2013. Photo: Evelyn Tsitas.

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Acknowledgement of Country

RMIT University acknowledges the people of the Woi wurrung and Boon wurrung language groups of the eastern Kulin Nation on whose unceded lands we conduct the business of the University. RMIT University respectfully acknowledges their Ancestors and Elders, past and present. RMIT also acknowledges the Traditional Custodians and their Ancestors of the lands and waters across Australia where we conduct our business - Artwork 'Luwaytini' by Mark Cleaver, Palawa.