Garry Shead b. 1942
The work emerges from the creative collaboration with the Melbourne Theatre Company. A natural partnership that seems obvious due to his dramaturgical approach to visual storytelling. This period encouraged him to think in terms of staging, dramatic rhythm, and the emotional timing usually reserved for actors on a stage.
Shead’s background as a filmmaker deepened this sensibility. This cross-between in practices allows him to deploy the directorial discipline of verbally shaping movement and arranging visual tension. His paintings from this era carry a sense of rehearsed scene-setting, and the elusive mise-en-scene that narrative painters crave; figures occupying a space literally motionless, but caught in an act.
Within this theatrical frame, Rembrandt and Muse unfolds with a narrative drawn from both Theatre and the stereotypes of an artist's life. play. Shead presents Rembrandt in a period of artistic uncertainty, accused of “selling out” and drifting from the seriousness that first drew the Muse to him. She stands apart, withholding and distantly calm, her detached coolness a quiet rebuke. She stands a sculpture of integrity, an inner voice he struggles to hear while bending to the tussle of expectation, commerce and fashion.
The painting captures the Artist's effort to return to himself. He seeks the Muse’s regard through a return to the initial pull if the artistic enterprises. One of dedication rather than performance through a steady discipline of a real artist reclaiming purpose. The tension in the scene comes from this fragile attempt at reconciliation: a painter asking to be seen again as someone worthy of inspiration.
In this context, Rembrandt and Muse gains a particular place within Shead’s body of work. The painting reflects his engagement with European art history, while also carrying the theatrical intelligence that emerged from his time with the MTC. A layered conversation between painting and performance, exploring the timeless artistic narratives of doubt, recovery, and authenticity.
