Events

A Decolonial Geographic

Summary

Hosted by the School of Creative Arts

Start Date

15th Dec 2017

Venue

Plimsoll Gallery, Hunter Street, Hobart

RSVP / Contact Information

NO RSVP REQUIRED - Enquiries: art.tsareception@utas.edu.au or 62264300

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Public Program: Friday 15 December 5pm - Q & A with Fernando do Campo, Penny Mason, Alex Pittendrigh, and Megan Walch.
Opening event: Friday 15 December, 5:30 - 7pm

Landscape can be defined through the history of painting and Australia alike. Ideas of the pastoral and the natural are commonly depicted as picture-postcard perfect – sublime and transcendent – and emptied of human beings. This is how we still think of landscape. Often gone unseen, the colonial lens prevails. A decolonial geographic recalibrates this idealised and Romantic view of what landscape signifies and how it should be portrayed.

There exist new philosophical and pictorial models through which to think about our presence on the planet. While the work of these eleven artists may not be commonly associated with the genre of landscape, their practices palpably engage with the personal, cultural and social narratives of the Australian terrain. Their work stays in the greyzone; remaining in the borders between different forms of being in the landscape. The sites we really inhabit are humancentric environments; colonized, gendered, political, re-mobilized, and filled with language, abstractions and surveillance. The work of these artists highlight the colonial hang-ups that often go unnoticed in the way Australia is represented and perceived. These artists make us aware of the human footprint. In so doing, they introduce a new lexicon for the genre of landscape.

Curated by Fernando do Campo.

Artists:

  • Richard Bell
  • Jon Cattapan
  • Juan Davila
  • Kerry Gregan
  • Raafat Ishak
  • Penny Mason
  • Alex Pittendrigh
  • Jessica Rankin
  • Judy Watson
  • Megan Walch
  • Ruth Waller

A decolonial geographic is a Devonport Regional Gallery exhibition toured by Contemporary Art Tasmania.

Contemporary Art Tasmania is supported by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its principal arts funding body, by the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy and is assisted through Arts Tasmania by the Minister for the Arts.

Devonport Regional Gallery is supported by the Devonport City Council and the Tasmanian State Government.

The exhibition is supported through Arts Tasmania by the Minister for the Arts and by the Contemporary Art Tasmania Exhibition Development Fund.

Image credit: Jon Cattapan, Fall of the Valley Kings, 2016, oil on linen. Courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery, Queensland.


Plimsoll Gallery
School of Creative Arts
University of Tasmania
Hunter Street, Hobart

Gallery Hours:
Wednesday - Monday | 12pm - 5pm (during exhibitions)
Closed Tuesdays and Public holidays

Please note Plimsoll Gallery will be closed between Sunday 24th December 2017 to Monday 1st January 2018 (inclusive)