Sylvia Schwenk
This work, which joins art with sport and community, was performed during half time at the NTFA Grand Final at Aurora Football Stadium, Launceston.
At the start of the performance the spectators were somewhat unsure of the work. Some of the audience joined in, but many more watched as the performers became the white lines of the field – the goalposts, the goal square and boundary line. There were even moments when some of the children on the field tried to kick balls at the performers. When the performers moved to become the 50 metre line and the boundary line, many more spectators joined in. The work culminated in the last movement, when the performers started to lie down along the white lines of the centre square – there was a transformation and spectators embraced the work and joined in. |
Sometimes awful things have their own kind of beauty is a mesmerising
work which shows a man Sylvia invited to perform - dancing with a
lawnmower to a harrowingly beautiful waltz, whilst mowing the lawn in an
area surrounded by perimeter fencing, alarmed fences, and razor wire. |
five Prison stories relays 5 stories about life in prison in a relaxed, private and almost humorous way. The work gives an insight into a way of living and area of society that most people have no exposure to or experience with. The stories are told in the third person and are set against images and footage of the inside of a prison. The film makes the inaccessible accessible in a simple and highly engaging way. |
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Remember the importance of SELF is a participatory work of performance art that seeks to reminds us that each of us is important and that who we are is more important than the gap, which exists between the life, we dreamt of and the life we have.
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Anja’s reality is a text-based work about a prostitute who offers ‘drive-thru’ sex in a designated zone for prostitution, in a city in the Netherlands. In the zone men can legally pick up a prostitute when a daytime two-way street is turned into a one-way circuit around a railway station. Prostitutes gets into clients’ cars and they drive into a parking area, which is sectioned into bays with strip rubber fixed to steel framework as divider ‘walls’ where they Three ’realities’ are presented in the work: Anja’s, the caretakers’, and ‘my reality’ (which serves as the reader’s view). These are printed on the wall of the gallery or as text on perspex, in script as if taken from a typed record of interview. As the viewer stops to read, his/her silhouette is cast in shadow from a light behind, imposing them directly into the trio of narratives. |
Red, blue or green? is from a body of work with the heavily ironic title, Anything you can see in person, you can see better on TV, which is a fun take on the spectacle and the belief that a televised image is better than being there in person. |
In the participatory work of performance art a large group of performers, positioned in a grid formation, perform This work was first performed during an artist residency at the Künstlerdorf in Schöppingen, Germany, and saw relationships being built across a diverse group of local residents and refugees from the Middle East and Africa living in Schöppingen. This social outcome evolved from the first rehearsal, where individuals grouped themselves with like-minded and likedressed people according to what felt safe and familiar, waiting for the rehearsal to begin, through to four weeks later with an art exhibition where performers greeted each other warmly and generously, often speaking in English, the second language for nearly all the people, re-living their experiences, creating new experiences and firming up friendships. The work was re-performed at the entrance to the Artfair in Sydney. |
Life preservers is from a body of work called They paved paradise put up a parking lot which shows off the latest footwear and dresses that Sylvia Schwenk designed for global warming. The project uses humour and imagination to deconstruct the well known issue of global warming to say: perhaps, sometimes if you can’t change a situation, you just have to change the way you think about it. |
Boots for Rising Waters was first performed on the steps of the Dom Cathedral in Cologne as an elegant and subtle intrusion into the everyday life of the city where fashion and performance came together in the mode of contemporary allegory to bring attention to issues of climate change. In the work nine women dressed in short black clothing model stylish but impractical high platform-gumboots that Sylvia designed as the latest footwear for global warming. The Boots are not suited to walking and ‘helpers’ assist the models during the performance. The stacked soles of the Boots range in height from ten to twenty-five centimetres – giving the wearer of the Boots the ability to choose a height that suits the water levels on any given day.
The Boots themselves are presented as sculptural works in gallery spaces and the performance |
X Performances are ephemeral large and individual Xs that are made of human bodies, in the middle of road intersections and important shared public spaces. X Performances is an international project that uses combinations of the human body, performance, fashion, intervention, public space and the everyday to create fun and participatory performances which encourage participation and look at various social issues.Local residents in Sydney, Saigon, Cologne and Dunedin have participated in these performances, creating huge Xs and individual ‘freestyle’ Xs with their bodies. Each performance is individually created for the urban space and culture of the city where the work was performed, and has a unique story and social discourse.
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The workers’ lift explores the hidden space workers in a large shopping centre in Cologne, Germany, occupy.
This work looks at the relationship between performance and the everyday, and reflects upon the significance and beauty of commonplace activities |
Loss and Love are two of the primal emotions of humanity. Is it possible to experience Loss without having felt Love; or to experience Love without knowing the fear of Loss? There are 3 works of art included in this body of work: 6 weeks; You cannot read loss, only feel it; and Loss and Love (after Robert Indiana). |
Under Surveillance was an art
intervention masquerading as an everyday event in Sydney, which saw
performers dressed as officials conducting surveillance. The
performers photographed and filmed people in public to stimulate
awareness of the level of surveillance our society is subjected to, and
to prompt thought about what the loss of privacy that accompanies this
heightened scrutiny means. |
I also work collaboratively with 'the collective', a group of artists who have come together to create artworks, situations and happenings. The focus is on creating awareness, discussion and engagement through participation, fun, energy, spontaneity, controversy and commentary. |












