The Future Is Now 2016

BRENNAN, Angela

Registration number

1631369

Artist/maker

BRENNAN, Angela

Title

The Future Is Now

Production date

2016

Medium

street poster printed on 100gsm envirocare recycled stock

Dimensions (H x W x D)

118.9 x 84.1 cm

Inscriptions

THE / FUTURE IS / NOT WHAT / IT / USED TO BE

Credit line

Purchased, 2016
City of Melbourne Art and Heritage Collection Courtesy of the artist and Niagara Galleries, Melbourne

Keywords

Angela Brennan, climate change, CLIMARTE, CLIMARTE Poster Project, Guy Abrahams, street poster, 2016

Summary

Angela Brennan was one of 11 Australian artists commissioned by Climarte, a not-for-profit that advocates ‘arts for a safe climate’, to produce a work for its poster program. The intention was to create posters that would engage the community to rally around climate change action and ‘convey the strength, optimism, and urgency we need to move to a clean, renewable energy future’. A0-size posters were printed in great number from each artist’s work and displayed at sites around Melbourne during May 2016; they were also shown at an exhibition simultaneously held at LAB-14 Gallery. Brennan’s poster was printed from a work she executed in oil on linen, painted in 2014, titled ‘The Future Is Now’. In characteristic style, she uses an engagingly bright palette, its boldness emphasised by an irregular grid of black lines. The composition invokes the abstractions of De Stijl artist Piet Mondrian, for whom representation distilled to such simple abstraction reflected an essential balance between nature and the universe – a spiritual order governing the visible world. The fragility of elemental balance is literally writ large Brennan’s portentous message: ‘the future is not what it used to be’. The determinedly playful, hand-rendered script might perhaps suggest a disconnect between humanity and the natural balance of forces that sustain planet Earth, the message and messenger separated by a great gulf in tone. Angela Brennan’s poster and the oil painting from which it was created came into the Art and Heritage Collection in 2016.