What Privilege panel and public game workshop at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas 2018
Read moreThe Colony - Murray Bridge Regional Gallery
The Colony - Who Comes to Visit? Exhibition, June 2018: Murray Bridge, SA.
This work-in-progress with Ngarrindjeri explores assimilation, treaty and bureaucracy as the logistics of empire.
What is your experience of whiteness and identity in the context of Treaty and colonization? How do we want to share our limited time on this planet? How do we come to terms?
The Colony is a dynamic, experimental installation, combining projection work, sculpture, line art and poetic audio-visual provocations. Opening Sunday June 17 at 2.30pm, with a Welcome to Country by Ngarrindjeri Elder Rose Rigney (find her speech below), speeches by the lead artists and drinks and nibbles. The installation will be shown from June 15 to July 22 2018.
Click here for useful links and background info about Treaty, Uluru Statement, Letters Patent and Native Title.
This cross-cultural collaboration was created by Jen Lyons-Reid [concept, line art, text], Carl Kuddell [concept, sculpture, text], Ngarrindjeri man Clyde Rigney Jnr [concept, text, audio], Felix Weber [sculptures, installation] and Johanis Lyons-Reid [video].
Welcome to the Colony
When you enter the Colony, who comes to visit? Navigate a bivouac of menacing, invasive colonies and colonial beliefs, to experience how Ngarrindjeri continue to maintain and share their cultural values in the tension between assimilation and treaty. “Nukkan Nganawi Ngarrindjeri Kringkari Ngoppen? Can you see my walk in your white world?”
Suspended in a surreal, timeless now, tinged with past, present and future colonial ventures, an array of cargo crates form a mobile bureaucratic envoy, dispatched to colonize this space.
HQ spews data, assessing and assimilating Ngarrindjeri values and dictating the terms of ‘settlement’. From its crates spill the colonizers cargo, flotsam, tools and toys, casting menacing shadows of invasion. Absurd technology prints and projects evaluation protocols and Colonizer roles, rendered as friendly, garish cartoons. A never-ending negotiation emanates from a makeshift tent. “Are you still here? Are you listening? Do I scare you? I am assimilated, I speak fluent Grey. We need to come to terms.”
Navigating this bivouac, audiences are invited to decipher the impact of colonial beliefs: What does assimilation mean to you? Which of the colonizers do you know? What is your experience of treaty and colonization? Who do you see when you look into the mirror? How do we want to share our limited time on this planet? How do we come to terms?
When you exit back into the colony through the Welcome gate, please take some information from the Community Notice Board.
What Privilege - The Colony [stage 1] - exhibition is one of the 2017-18 outcomes of our cross-cultural collaboration during Creating Together - what can possibly go wrong?, alongside What Privilege - Unity of Oppression show at Nexus Arts, Adelaide.
What Privilege- The Colony [stage 2] - exhibition and games, 2018-19: We plan to create an interactive game world, run by a colonial bureaucracy, ‘Grey Matters Inc’, with a diverse range of artists, partners and communities. This intersectional project and participatory game will explore concepts of intersectionality, insurrection and solidarity. and Goolwa South Coast Arts Centre in August 2019 during SALA Festival.
What Privilege - this breath is not mine to keep [stage 3] - arts trail, 2019-21: In the third stage we will present the work to regional arts venues, festivals and other events, further develop interactive and mobile elements of the work and tour the game, performance and exhibition nationally.
Floor sheet info clockwise from Gallery entrance:
Entrance: ‘Community Notice Board’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, lamp-post ads featuring What Privilege’s 50 colonizers and their 10 gangs, mixed media, 2018
Left-hand wall 1: ‘Can you see me?’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, sculpture, Ngarrindjeri archival images of Clyde's ancestors Grace and Daniel Gollan, mirror-glass, metal, LED, mixed media, 3x 55cm x 45cm, 2018
Centre: ‘The Colony Cargo’ - Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, sculpture, 5x 90cm x 90cm x 180cm, mixed media, 2018
‘You didn’t see me coming’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, mixed media, digital photo-frame, 2018
‘Mission protocol’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Felix Weber, Clyde Rigney Jnr, kinetic sculpture, wooden printer with endless canvas loop, mixed media, 2018
Left-hand wall 2: ‘This is not a toy’ – Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, sculpture + shadow projection, wood, torch, 2018
Back wall: ‘Surveillance / Protection’ - Johanis Lyons-Reid, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, video projection, featuring videos created in collaboration with Ngarrindjeri, 2018
Right-hand wall: ‘Three Cheers for Civilization’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, dual channel video projection, line art, poetry, 2018
Right-hand wall/ entry wall right corner: ‘We meet again (are you still listening?)’ - Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Felix Weber, sculpture, metal/ canvas tent, audio-video projection, 1.7mx 2.5m, 2018
Entry/ Exit wall: ‘Story Theft’ – Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, video projection, Ngarrindjeri values, line art, poetry, 2018
Exit: ‘Welcome to the Colony’ – Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, sculpture, 4.5mx 3m, wood, mixed media, LED-neon, 2018
Credits:
Artistic concept / co-curators: Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell
Sculptures and installations: Felix Weber, Carl Kuddell, Jen Lyons-Reid
Video / FX: Johanis Lyons-Reid
Cartoons and line art: Jen Lyons-Reid
Poetry/ text: Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr
Spoken word performance: Clyde Rigney Jnr
Editing (slide projections and audio): Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell
Seamstress extraordinaire: Jemima Thompson
Printing: PrintsAlive (Thanks Warren and Trevor)
Bump-in support: Melinda Rankin and her lovely team, Det, Don, Trevor and all the other volunteers and tech support at the Murray Bridge Regional Gallery and city council
Welcome to Country: Ngarrindjeri Elder Rose Rigney
Photo and video documentation: Johanis Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell
Ngarrindjeri Catering: Little Catering Co
And a big shout out to all our community participants, funders and supporters.
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the South Australian Government through Arts SA.
The project has been supported by the Regional Gallery Murray Bridge.
What Privilege - Mars looks nice...
Within this strand of What Priviliege we are looking at digital futures:
Who owns our imagination?
What futures, fears and opportunities are arising in times of near total commodification in the burgeoning empire of illusion?
We are working with Feral Arts and Darwin Community Arts on this project, with some crossover with our public art game development with Act Now Theatre and Fire Hazard Australia.
In November 2017 we worked with Feral Arts developing and scrutinizing ideas for Arts Front's digital futures campaigns.
We came up with a few funky concepts, a trailer for a web-based mini-series and a meme campaign concept.
Now we are working towards a presentation for ANAT's Digital Futures symposium.
What Privilege - Unlearn Supremacy
We are working with Fire Hazard Australia, Act Now Theatre and Nexus Arts to develop a playable pubic intervention art game based on our What Privilege model.
The first development stage included a series of intenisve development labs and participatory game workshops with participants from diverse backgrounds.
We are now working with Fire Hazard to further develop the game world and map out the task, roles and interventions based on our notice, disrupt and reframe methodolgy.
We also teamed up with Wild Light Projects to explore multimedia and video options for the work and support her to use the cards and What Privilege model as part of her CACD outreach.
Unity of Oppression - Nexus Arts Gallery
Adelaide, SA
Change Media and Nexus Arts, in collaboration with the Regional Gallery of Murray Bridge, present this experimental art exhibition as part of its national What Privilege? Initiative. Here is a sneak preview slideshow from the opening at Nexus Arts on April 5th:.
Update: Missed out? The Unity of Oppression will be on tour at the Regional Art Gallery Murray Bridge June 15 - July 22 2018.
And here is the slide show from the launch at Nexus Arts in April 2018:
‘What Privilege? - The unity of oppression’ explores what unites and divides us: We share a finite planet, what futures will we forge from the infinity of darkness? Each artist took up the challenge to respond to What Privilege? and find creative responses to the Unity of Oppression...
Playing with the duality of light and dark, using acrylics, sculpture and multi-media, five artists from culturally diverse backgrounds create a journey into the complexities of power, privilege and oppression - inviting you to peel away hidden layers and join them on a creative crime scene investigation of our shared humanity.
The Unity of Oppression works are co-led with interdisciplinary Ngarrindjeri-Chinese artist Damien Shen [painting, mixed media] and feature emerging artists Emilijia Kasumovic [drawing, mixed media] and Jelena Vujnovic [drawing], alongside work from Jen Lyons-Reid [line art, poetry, mixed media, sculpture] and Carl Kuddell [poetry, mixed media, sculpture].
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the South Australian Government through Arts SA, with support by Nexus Arts and the Regional Gallery Murray Bridge.
List of Works for ‘What Privilege? - The unity of oppression’:
Damien Shen:
‘A message from God to the Blackfellow’, 2018, acrylic on canvas, 4 x 160x100cm
Emilija Kasumovic:
‘Interbeing’, 2017, mixed media on tulle, 100x70cm
‘Messenger from inner space’, 2018, mixed media on tulle, 80x150cm
Jelena Vujnovic:
'A person who returns’, 2018, mixed media on canvas, 5mx2m
Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell:
’The Handshake’, 2018, mixed media on canvas, 294cmx207m
’Insert Face Here’, 2003/ 2018, sculpture, acrylic on wood, 1.8mx2mx1m
‘What Privilege?’, 2017, 50 printed character cards
Artists Statements:
Damien Shen: ‘A message from God to the Blackfellow’
A message from God to the Blackfellow, is an ongoing significant body of work by Ngarrindjeri-Chinese artist Damien Shen. In continuing his engagement with archives and museums, Shen draws on the encounters between Reverend George Taplin and the Ngarrindjeri people, to establish a thematic framework for this series. These encounters are drawn from Taplin’s diaries and give great detail on his engagement with Ngarrindjeri. Shen was particularly drawn to Taplin’s entry about a discussion with a ‘native’ on April the 7th, 1859.
“I then endeavoured to explain to him that I had a message from God to the Blackfellows, and what it was, and asked him to tell the others about it. He seemed to understand me but was evidently surprised. It is my impression at present that more will be done by individualising the natives than by teaching them collectively. I shall see how this idea is confirmed or otherwise bye-and-bye.”[1]
For these new works, Shen’s response to the righteous and paternalistic views of the times, which position his ancestors as inferior black subjects, takes the form of a series of large digital portraits, depicting his Ngarrindjeri elders, whom were photographed by Norman TIndal at Raukkan in South Australia. These mixed media works depict his family, displayed in a monochromatic and sombre palette.
A stark background frame their figures, a visual cue to the anthropological methods utilised in ‘documenting’ the Ngarrindjeri community. Whiteness didn’t just surround each of his forebears, but pervaded into their very being. They are submerged underneath a sheath of pale rhythmic dotting, ghosted in the virtues of whiteness while their selfhood was simultaneously erased by ‘well-meaning’ messengers of God, in state-sanctioned, publically funded assimilation machines.
Damien Shen is represented by MARS Gallery (Melbourne)
[1] Reverend George Taplin, The Journals of the Reverend George Taplin, Missionary to the Ngarrindjeri People of the Lower Murray, Lakes and the Coorong,1859 – 1879, 7 April 1859, http://www.firstsources.info/uploads/3/4/5/4/34544232/taplins_diary_1859-79.pdf
Emilija Kasumovic: ‘Interbeings’
“The head is the universe, it’s where everything happens. It’s where thoughts happen. Its shape, an oval, like an egg, is symbolic to suggest infinity.” David Altmejd, artist
Using painting and drawing on layers of sheer fabric, Emilija explores the mind’s ability to stretch beyond what we are conditioned to believe about our privileged state and position in the society.
The need for violence, war and division are all distorted search by us for pleasure and happiness, and therefore, generated by the egoistic principle and our identification with ‘form’. Our need for possession and dominance is how ego feeds and continually generates its power. Once we realize that our true self is not conditioned by form, or anything we can name, categorize and identify with, we dissolve into boundlessness.
‘Unless we get rid of our ego, there is no peace either for ourselves or for the others.”
Jelena Vujnovic: 'A person who returns’
Within this work I invite the audience to explore the fragmented nature of the remembered landscapes in my mind. I have used the forms of the Yugoslav monuments that sit in stark contrast to their organic landscapes. Monuments that stand grand and strong to commemorate lives affected and lost in times of war. The works invite the audience to engage, without offering the opportunity to be deciphered entirely.
We all have an endless layering of memories from experiences in different environments, while simultaneously, the environments are influenced by events that unfold in them. My travels back to Serbia and Croatia are a catalyst for new engagement with my old homes and the feedback between memory and environment continues, with each leaving a mark on the other.
My upbringing, exile and migrations are unique to me even though they are a common story. What we all share is the unique nature of experience, what divides us is the inability to fully understand each other’s experiences. To develop tolerance, I believe we need to let go of the need to define each other in absolutes and focus instead on acceptance. Acceptance gives way to respect, and therefore tolerance will grow.
Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell:
What Privilege? cards, ’The Handshake’ and ’Insert Face Here’
We are exploring how to depict the messy, entangled interdependence and connectivity of power and privilege to renegotiate and reinvent our shared humanity.
50 What Privilege? cards, 2017
The satirical cards depict inevitable power and privileged behaviors we have identified over 20 years of co-creative practice. They are the provocation for our 2017-18 national project, ‘Creating Together – what can possibly go wrong?’ We invite audiences and collaborators to notice, disrupt and reframe colonizing mindsets through a series of Power-Tarot and role-play games.
‘The Handshake’, work-in-progress, 2018.
The laughable clowns of power shake hands, clothed in the emperor’s old quotes, a deal ritualized. The corporate wallpaper backdrop displays a thousand cartoons, an iconographic map of supremacy beliefs and oppressive slogans encoded in the fabric of culture. These colonizing mindsets are interconnected and simultaneously absurd and inevitable. The rules are rigged. Everyone is a player. We all know the game. In a global confluence of moral and metaphysical bankruptcy, what are we going to do about it? Pick a card, any card.
We focus on the wall as a negotiated space, using dialectical satire, street-art murals and branding to mirror the absurd wallpaper commodification of art. We believe Enlightenment philosophy is a colonial frame we are all acculturated into - class power, sexism, racism, ableism, capitalism… are all narratives that privilege selected people, who benefit from the oppression of the targeted. These stories are so deeply woven into our daily lives as natural, and/or historic, it can be confronting to explore our personal involvement, easier to blame it on a few bullies, ‘it’s not me’. Yet every human interaction is a negotiation, defining how we have control in our lives. We use cartoons as a playful tool to explore how we maintain power through ignorance.
‘Insert Face Here’, 2003/ 2018
All the interactivity of a funfair selfie, the foldout scene from the Woomera Detention Centre jailbreak in 2002 offers the viewer the opportunity to get into the picture. Will you be immortalized as the detainee or the enforcer, with the power to maintain the status quo? There were 21 million people seeking refuge worldwide 15 years ago, now there are 60 million. Australia detains thousands overseas, to protect ‘our’ borders.
In a Kafkaesque, out of sight, out of mind, bureaucratic brutality, people are destroyed to maintain the delusion of ‘our way of life’. We think the work, first shown at SALA 2003, remains disturbingly relevant 15 years later. Selfies welcome.
Artist Bios
Damien Shen:
Damien Shen is a South Australian man of Ngarrindjeri (Aboriginal) and Chinese descent. As an artist he draws on both of these powerful cultural influences to create works of intense personal meaning. In using his artistic talent to share his story he aims to open the eyes of viewers to new ways of seeing Australian identity and Aboriginal art.
Emilijia Kasumovic:
Emilija Kasumovic is Serbian born, living in Adelaide. Her work is concerned with human condition and what defines us as human beings beyond our biological bodies.
Jelena Vujnovic:
Fascinated by natural and artificial structures, Jelena Vujnovic sees the building blocks of our bodies and our urban environment as the scaffolding on which we construct our lives. Focused on an uninterrupted and organic development of her work, she is constantly playing and experimenting with new materials and forms.
Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell:
Artistic director and graphic artist, Jen Lyons-Reid, and creative producer and writer, Carl Kuddell, are Tallstoreez Productionz co-founders and award-winning multidisciplinary artists and filmmakers. Since 2002 they have explored satire across art forms, from poetry, cartoons, sculptures, live art, to documentaries and several TV series. They run Change Media as a national arts initiative, focusing on critical literacy through arts and media. They have delivered hundreds of workshops and performances with thousands of participants across Australia. Their strategic advisory work includes investigations into value, equity and harm in socially engaged arts, as part of an ARC Linkage partnership with VCA in 2013-14 and Jen’s 2-year Australia Council Fellowship 2015-16.
Photos by Wild Light Projects - thanks Amanda for your amazing support.
©2018 Tallstoreez Productionz Pty Ltd and Change Media
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Aboriginal media training in Port Augusta through SA Film Corporation and Country Arts SA
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