Moving Histories // Future Projections

 


ABOUT

Moving Histories // Future Projections brings together some of Australia’s leading female contemporary artists working across screen based media including Mikala Dwyer and Justene Williams, Amala Groom, Deborah Kelly, Kate Blackmore and Jacinta Tobin, Joan Ross, Soda_Jerk, Angelica Mesiti and Caroline Garcia, curated by Kelly Doley and Diana Baker-Smith of Barbara Cleveland (formally Brown Council).

The artists in Moving Histories // Future Projections approach their subject matter in a variety of ways – they turn the camera on themselves, re-stage historical events or reimagine alternative futures through speculative accounts of the past. Yet through repetition, montage and mimicry, they all explore a space where time folds in on itself and back again and each looks back while also moving forward. Collectively and individually they act as historians, archivists and archaeologists – excavating historical materials, digging through archives and channeling the past to make new connections across time and space.

In The Time that Remains (2012), Soda_Jerk manipulate found footage and the materiality of video to stage an on-screen engagement between two deceased screen stars, Joan Crawford and Bette Davis and their past and future selves.

The Invisibility of Blackness (2014) by Amala Groom is interplay between presence and disappearance of cultural identity as Groom repeatedly speaks in her matriarchal Wiradjuri lineage, in order to connect with the present. As the screen slowly fades to black, Groom’s embodied utterances continue through the darkness.

Joan Ross stitches together Australia’s post-colonial historical imagery in her animation Colonial Grab (2014). Through playfully cutting and pasting contemporary symbols of excess and desire over iconic Australian landscape paintings she highlights the ongoing presence of a repressive past.

Kate Blackmore’s Ngallowan (They Remain) (2014) attempts to exhume the complex and uncomfortable history between colonial and First Nations people. While Blackmore determinedly paints herself into a corner with white paint, literally ‘white-washing’ her body from view, the unwavering traditional song of Dharug Elder Jacinta Tobin remains.

In an exploration of invisible pasts, forgotten narratives and repressed memories, the exhibition reminds us how history is fractured along contradictory lines of race, class and gender. It is through the voice of the artist that we are presented with new, alternative futures.

Visitors have commented:

“So wonderful and so inspirational. Thank you. So much humour and sadness.”

“8 wonderful works – provocative, amusing, contrasting, very very engaging.”

“well done! Worth taking the time to view each piece more than once…”

Bega Valley Regional Gallery, NSW

 


ABOUT THE CURATORS

Moving Histories // Future Projections is curated by Kelly Doley and Diana Baker-Smith of the collaborative artist group BC Institute. Doley is currently a PhD Candidate at UNSW Art & Design and is the recipient of a University Postgraduate Scholarship. She is researching the politics and aesthetics of socially engaged performance practice. Smith currently works as a lecturer at the University of Technology Sydney and is completing her PhD on experimental methodologies for historicising performance at the University of NSW.

 

 


ITINERARY

Toowoomba Regional Gallery, QLD 18 February – 23 April 2017
Cairns Regional Gallery, QLD 12 May – 18 June 2017
Mosman Art Gallery, NSW 21 October 2017 – 21 January 2018
Blue Mountains Cultural Centre, NSW 20 January – 11 March 2018
Bega Valley Regional Gallery, NSW 16 March – 28 April 2018
Latrobe Regional Gallery, VIC 5 May – 8 July 2018
Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery, NSW 28 July – 28 Sept 2018
Broken Hill Regional Gallery, NSW 28 September – 11 November 2018
Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, NSW 16 February – 12 May 2019
Grafton Regional Gallery, NSW 5 September – 20 October 2019

 


RESOURCES

 


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Artlink Review

Un Projects Review

 


 

 

A dLux Media Arts exhibition toured by Museums & Galleries of NSW