Temple of Boom will be painted over the summer months by a list of Melbourne street and urban artists who have been guest curated by Toby Benador, Founder and Director, Just Another Agency.
FIRST LAYER COLLABORATION
David Lee Pereira is a visual artist whose works explore the fluidity of gender, sexuality and identity. Influenced by the work of impressionist and surrealist artists Georgia O’Keefe, Salvador Dali and Edvard Munch, Pereira has adorned the structure with large-than-life floral motifs that draw attention to nature’s flamboyant use of scent and colour to allure pollinators.
Manda Lane is a muralist, illustrator and paper-based artist from Collingwood, Victoria. With a keen focus on botanicals, her art explores the interactions between the natural world and industrial or man-made objects. In this mural installation, Lane depicts various growth behaviours of plants, creating a visual metaphor for personal expression and growth.
Drez is a multidisciplinary artist based in Melbourne who uses colour and form to play with perspective. Drawing inspiration from art historical perspectives, including the Greenbergian Modernism and Op-Art schools, Drez’s work creates an intersection between abstract art and street art. For this installation, Drez has created a boldly colourful mural that changes composition when viewed from different angles.
SECOND LAYER COLLABORATION
Creature Creature is an artist duo consisting of Chanel Tang and Ambrose Rehorek based in Melbourne in Australia. They first met at university and ‘flirted through art’ until they formed an official union in 2011 under one name. Creature Creature was chosen from a quote in the 1960’s film A Bucket of Blood; “A Creature is a Creature…or it is an artist!” Since then, they have continued a collaborative art practice that spans across exhibiting art, murals, street art, design and illustration. Their work represents duality and the sum of a whole, a message of togetherness, states of balance, yin and yang. Their partnership breaks the myth of the lone artist, as collaboration is an instinctive ritual for them in realms of art, love and life. Collaboration is about preserving diversity, creating something complex, layered and fluid. The beauty of coming together. Born in Adelaide, Ambrose has a Degree in Visual Arts from the University of South Australia. Chanel was born in Wellington, New Zealand, moved to Australia in 1998 where she did her Degree in Fine Art at Monash University. They met doing a Graduate Diploma in Graphic Design at RMIT.
Manda lane is a muralist, illustrator and paper-based artist from Collingwood, Victoria. With a keen focus on botanicals, her art explores the interactions between the natural world and industrial or man-made objects. Within her public art practice, Manda creates floral-based murals and installations, focusing on the organic behaviours of native and tropical flora. Working predominantly in black and white, Manda adopts a contemporary and stylised approach to traditional botanical art, with the purpose of re-connecting communities to the beauty of nature, while also seeking to encourage a conversation about the symbiotic relationships between the nature and the urban environment.
Aretha Brown, practising artist and screenwriter, takes heavy influence from her time growing up in Melbourne’s Western Suburbs. As well as her own identity as a queer, Blak, young person living in the confinements of an urban colony. In 2021, Aretha wrote her first subversive comedy short titled How to be cool in Melbourne. Parodying the ideas, inner workings and social politics of Melbourne’s underground art and cultural spaces. Aretha has also been a regular appearance at comedy clubs, performing her signature political and satirical stand-up throughout Melbourne. Aretha founded the **Kiss My Art Collective. Formed to champion young women and non-binary artists by providing jobs, work experience and a safe creative space on large-scale public murals throughout Australia and internationally.
Chuck Mayfield, coming from a family of artists, has been practicing in creative fields from an early age. He has been painting and drawing his whole life, and started painting graffiti art and murals at age 16. After thirteen years of working in Brisbane as a commercial mural artist, a screenprinter, and in the field of sign and displays, he acquired a bachelor in visual communication and moved to Melbourne to pursue a career in the arts. Chuck has painted murals and exhibited work in cities across Australia, Asia, Europe and the US, and continues to travel, painting walls and working on creative projects. He now lives in Melbourne and works from Everfresh studio as freelance artist, mostly painting murals, while also producing personal works in public, private spaces, for live performance and exhibitions.
Resio is a Melbourne, Australia-based contemporary artist whose works are a unique combination of styles inspired by Abstract Expressionism, Action Painting and the global visual and physical language of graffiti. Resio’s works weave together complex abstractions of dynamic colour, shapes and movement with photorealism and a masterful approach to the traditions of graffiti and studio painting techniques. Resio’s ‘language’ is easily translatable to large-scale public murals, studio painting, and private commissions. This diversity in expression has earned him a reputation as a unique talent emerging from a long line of Australian artists inspired by the international dialogue of art and graffiti who choose to exhibit their work on both Gallery and public walls.