{"id":300383,"date":"2025-11-22T00:53:12","date_gmt":"2025-11-22T00:53:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/300383\/"},"modified":"2025-11-22T00:53:12","modified_gmt":"2025-11-22T00:53:12","slug":"master-of-material-transformation-hany-armanious","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/300383\/","title":{"rendered":"Master of material transformation Hany Armanious"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Hany Armanious creates confounding and enigmatic sculptural forms and artefacts. He brings into being mysterious works that unlock the energy, sensation and perversity embedded within inanimate objects, everyday things and the world around us.<\/p>\n<p>Born in Ismailia, Egypt, in 1962, Armanious immigrated to Australia with his family at the age of six \u2013 a cultural and linguistic dislocation he has described as an overwhelming sensory experience. \u201cI was not ready for the colour!\u201d he explained in an interview last year. \u201cCairo is predominantly grey and dusty, and there\u2019s not a lot of trees or greenery, so what was most striking was the bright green of so many trees, the really bright red of the terracotta roofs on the houses and just how bright the light was; it really was like stepping into another world. It was like being on drugs\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This early experience of intense visual and cultural transformation and his enduring fascination with perception continue to animate Armanious\u2019s exploration of the uncanny and sensory dimensions of everyday life. It reverberates in the unconventional course of his artistic trajectory. A central figure in the emerging \u201cgrunge\u201d tendency of the early 1990s, Armanious was a key participant in now fabled exhibitions such as Rad Scunge and Monster Field, in the same year his work was included in the curated Aperto section of the 1993 Venice Biennale. In 1998, he received the prestigious Mo\u00ebt &amp; Chandon Award for Untitled Snake Oil, an elegant, mercurial installation of hot-melt pigmented resin and glassware that evoked alchemical processes of material and formal transformation. A decade or so later, he would return to Venice as Australia\u2019s representative in 2011, presenting meticulously cast sculptural objects \u2013 at once archaic and modern, formal and informal, concrete and uncanny \u2013 that reimagined everyday materials as relics of uncertain origin and function.<\/p>\n<p>Now head of sculpture at Sydney\u2019s National Art School, Armanious was the subject of a major survey inaugurating the refurbished Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, in 2024 \u2013 a critically acclaimed tour de force that has returned to Australia, opening this week in an expanded form at Buxton Contemporary, University of Melbourne.<\/p>\n<p>Moore was a British modernist sculptor whose works circulated throughout the anglophone world in the 20th century as pervasively as modernism itself. \u201cHe was the only sculptor I was aware of as a teenager at school,\u201d Armanious recalls. The invitation to reopen the Henry Moore Institute was auspicious \u2013 an occasion that might also be read as a return of the repressed, a colonial recasting returned to the source of empire \u2013 but also a potentially intimidating context \u2013 an artist who cautions that \u201csculpture is something I\u2019ve never been consciously interested in\u201d exhibiting at one of the world\u2019s\u00a0foremost centres for sculpture.<\/p>\n<p>If classical sculpture invokes questions of form, volume, mass and materiality, Armanious extends these concerns into existential dimensions, both playful and philosophical. His sculptures are not content merely to occupy space: they think, and they invite us to think. They are sceptical and self-reflexive about their own making, their role as objects and their participation in systems of cultural value and belief. With both lightness and gravity, Armanious\u2019s sculptures meditate on being itself: on the status of objects and, by implication, on human experience.<\/p>\n<p>Armanious is known for his mastery of extraordinary processes of material transformation, turning commonplace objects into exalted artefacts that are at once haptic and symbolic, illusory and real. He has long exploited the fluid, inchoate properties of fugitive materials \u2013 hot-melt plastics, lead, clay, wax and peppercorns, and more recently resins and glass \u2013 to encourage aberrant and chance formations according to laws of nature and materiality, and endow his sculptures with an organic life of their own.<\/p>\n<p>Since representing Australia in Venice, he has refined a complex range of experimental casting and assemblage techniques. These form the basis of Hany Armanious: Stone Soup, curated by Henry Moore Institute director Laurence Sillars in collaboration with Charlotte Day and Samantha Comte at Buxton Contemporary. Like a form of \u201cthree-dimensional printmaking\u201d, Armanious\u2019s casting of pigmented polyurethane resin has seen him go to almost absurd lengths to replicate everyday objects with impossible verisimilitude and luminosity \u2013 freezing time and matter while preserving a sense of ordinariness, humility and presence in the here and now.<\/p>\n<p>Appearances, of course, can be deceiving. Functioning as paradoxical replicas or facsimiles, Armanious\u2019s sculptures occupy a space between what they are and what they appear to be. A sculpture may read as a ready-made or an assemblage yet be entirely handmade \u2013 painstakingly, even obsessively, produced over time. A cast object might seem more \u201creal\u201d than its source, a riddle of material truth versus perceptual belief.<\/p>\n<p>This oscillation keeps the viewer alert: sculpture becomes as much a cognitive experience as a physical one, drawing us into questions of seeing and believing. We cannot assume; we must investigate. This is one of the philosophical undercurrents running through Armanious\u2019s practice: how do we know what we think we know \u2013 about an object, about the world, about ourselves?<\/p>\n<p>While his practice is sculptural in form, his early training as a painter continues to shape his engagement with aesthetic and philosophical questions of appearance, illusion and reality. Flat Earth (2017), for instance, is a sculptural object that appears suspended like a painting turned to the wall: a muddy cake of cement pressed like a bog into the reverse side of a stretched canvas. Its constituent parts \u2013 canvas, stretcher and medium \u2013 are foundational to the very definition of painting.<\/p>\n<p>The work recalls Gustave Courbet\u2019s L\u2019Origine du monde (The Origin of the World, 1866) \u2013 once deemed obscene and now held in the Mus\u00e9e d\u2019Orsay \u2013 a painting that pushed realism to its limits and exposed the inherently erotic nature of representation itself. Flat Earth commands our attention as a primal, three-dimensional thing in the world, its material mysteries left for us to divine.<\/p>\n<p>Functioning as paradoxical replicas or facsimiles, Armanious\u2019s sculptures occupy a space between what they are and what they appear to be.<\/p>\n<p>If Flat Earth dramatises the dynamics of the gaze, his Sneeze Paintings (2010) extend that inquiry by translating sensation itself into sculptural form. Cast in polyurethane resin rather than painted on canvas, these paradoxical objects capture the ephemerality and the momentary loss of control of a sneeze, giving form to in-between sensations of anticipation, tickle and release, and the quiet melancholy that follows its fleeting intensity.<\/p>\n<p>While rooted in everyday forms, Armanious\u2019s work maintains a playful dialogue with the sculptural canon: Brancusi\u2019s essentialism, Duchamp\u2019s ready-made, Picasso\u2019s hybridity, Giacometti\u2019s existential precariousness, Bourgeois\u2019s teasing eroticism. Arte povera\u2019s humble poetics meet the grandeur of ancient Egyptian ritual objects. These reference points surface as loose, informal riffs rather than solemn homages. They raise questions about perception, meaning and mortality: the condition of being alive, the nature of relationships and our entanglement with more-than-human others.<\/p>\n<p>Armanious\u2019s work also traces deeper lines of cultural inheritance and remembrance. In series such as his suites of Moths and Sphinxes, he revisits traditions of still life and assemblage as meditations on mortality and transformation in contemporary memento mori that blur the threshold between the animate and the inert. \u201cMoths are guardians of the underworld,\u201d the artist notes. \u201cThey\u2019re strangely ugly and inscrutable, and incredibly energetic, with a weird anatomy.\u201d It\u2019s an observation that might equally describe the artist\u2019s work itself.<\/p>\n<p>In the artist\u2019s hands, these nocturnal creatures are caught, frozen, statue-like, seemingly conscious of their symbolic role as custodians of mystery and agents of change. Likewise, the various Sphinx sculptures invoke both cultural ancestry and formal sculptural problems: hybrid figures poised between human and animal, body and base, Egypt and Australia. In both series, the impulse to collect, memorialise and reconfigure persists \u2013 not as nostalgia but as a vital dialogue with ancestry, belief and the sculptural language of life and afterlife.<\/p>\n<p>A certain playfulness prevails as the artist moves effortlessly from an existential theatre of the absurd to contemporary slapstick, from alchemy to fetish, animism to voodoo. His sculptures oscillate between the sacred and the tragicomic, investing the banal with ritual charge and the ludic with metaphysical weight. In this delicate tension \u2013 between laughter and reverence, wonder and futility, object and illusion \u2013 Armanious locates a space of enchantment, where the everyday becomes strange again and the act of making turns towards mystery. His sculptures feel discovered rather than made: they embody cultural memory, with time running through them like sand.<\/p>\n<p>In the gallery, Armanious\u2019s installations unfold as intricate mises en sc\u00e8ne in which sculptural objects, images and surfaces conspire to transform the space into a field of perceptual play. Sculptures rest directly on the floor or lean against the walls, in most cases without plinths. The works become continuous with the space of the viewer, reasserting sculpture\u2019s relationship to the body and to everyday life. The scenography extends across the walls, where printed trompe l\u2019oeil images of stains, peeling plaster and screw holes implicate the architecture itself in the unfolding drama of the work. The gallery becomes both stage and subject, destabilising our sense of what is real and what is illusory while prompting a more attentive mode of looking. The effect is at once disorienting and playful, a gentle unmooring that opens new perceptual experience and possibility.<\/p>\n<p>An additional, more meditative register emerges through works such as Water Lilies (2018), a monumental pigment print on linen spanning six metres, that depicts a studio wall repeatedly painted over to form a palimpsest of erasure and accumulation. Washed in soft lilacs, purples and pinks, it radiates a haze that shimmers like light across water \u2013 a panoramic fetishisation of the ordinary, doubling the familiar textures of the spaces we inhabit yet rarely notice.<\/p>\n<p>As American curator Anne Ellegood has written, Armanious honours \u201cthe primordial urge to attempt to understand the mysteries of the world through the making of objects\u201d. His art invites the same impulse in the viewer, so that close looking becomes an act of attention with ethical weight, an insistence that what surrounds us, however humble, deserves scrutiny, curiosity and care. In a culture of speed, surface attention and algorithmic artifice, Armanious slows perception down. He makes objects that resist quick consumption and reward sustained reflection.<\/p>\n<p>Titles such as Plato\u2019s Cave, We Astrologers and Empathy Chart operate as philosophical prompts, provoking speculation and contradiction \u2013 belief versus knowledge, illusion versus enlightenment \u2013 and remind us of the inevitable incompleteness of understanding. Like the riddle of the sphinx, Armanious\u2019s conundrums are not meant to be solved but to be lived with. He stands as an existential sculptor of the everyday, memorialising its absurdities while insisting they be taken seriously.<\/p>\n<p>Technically dexterous, materially experimental and intellectually agile, Armanious\u2019s work remains deliberately elusive. Even at its most demanding it retains a deceptive informality, as if the artist has casually nudged things into being. Small gestures assume epic scope: ordinary objects are recast with new aura, charged with esoteric meaning and elevated into quiet monumentality. Nothing is overdetermined and surprise remains possible. \u201cMy work gives equal value to everything,\u201d Armanious says, which is also to say that everything deserves to\u00a0be looked at and nothing should be taken for granted.<\/p>\n<p>\n          This article was first published in the print edition of The Saturday Paper on<br \/>\n            November 22, 2025 as &#8220;Ordinary mysteries&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>\n      For almost a decade, The Saturday Paper has published Australia\u2019s leading writers and thinkers.<br \/>\n      We have pursued stories that are ignored elsewhere, covering them with sensitivity and depth.<br \/>\n      We have done this on refugee policy, on government integrity, on robo-debt, on aged care,<br \/>\n      on climate change, on the pandemic.\n    <\/p>\n<p>\n      All our journalism is fiercely independent. 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He brings into being mysterious works that unlock&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":300384,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[31],"tags":[449,458,459,64,63,460,134],"class_list":{"0":"post-300383","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-arts-and-design","8":"tag-arts","9":"tag-arts-and-design","10":"tag-artsanddesign","11":"tag-au","12":"tag-australia","13":"tag-design","14":"tag-entertainment"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/300383","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=300383"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/300383\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/300384"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=300383"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=300383"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=300383"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}