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Lockhart River Art Gang « Previous | |Next »
May 10, 2007

I see that the Art Museum at the University of Queensland currently has an exhibition of the Lockhart River Artists entitled Our Way, Contemporary Aboriginal Art from Lockhart River. This is the first exhibition to survey the work of the Lockhart River Art Gang.

Some of the artists in the exhibition include those we have seen before on junk for code: namely, Rosella Namok, Samantha Hobson and Fiona Omeenyo.

HobsonSBurningflat.jpg
Samantha Hobson, Burning Flat at Tozers Gap, 2003, pigment, synthetic polymer and glaze on canvas

The Art Gang have developed their own forms of expression which are very different from the art of central Australia and other parts of Australia. Many of the expressionistic and abstract paintings depict the landscape around Lockhart River while still paying heed to cultural traditions of the past.

An example of work straddling the ground between modern and traditional is that by Rosella Namok:

NamokRparast.jpg
Rosella Namok, Para Street, Lockhart River, acrylic on canvas

Her abstractions remain referential to the shapes and weathers of her locale.Her art is conceptual, making it unique within the Cape York region, where tradition and ceremony dictate a more figurative style of artistic expression.

OmeenyaFStrong.jpg
Fiona Omeenyo, Strong, 2004, acrylic on canvas

Fiona Omeenyo's paintings are based on the story of her home country given to her by her Uncle Blade.

These paintings do not simply address or provoke a viewer, they demand and entail an interpreter since history, memory and tradition can no longer be thought within representation and mimesis;

| Posted by Gary Sauer-Thompson at 12:21 AM | | Comments (2)
Comments

Comments

I am going to go to this and looking forward to it.
I will have to bite my tongue if the 3rd painting is there. So I dont burst into Rubber Ducky your the one! You make me feel so spring and sprung!

Les,
I'm not sure what works are being exhibited. It sounds extensive but there is little online. As you've mentioned before the quality of the work ifrom Lockhart River is uneven.

The art market's eagerness to find a new wellspring of indigenous art for hungry Australian and overseas collectors has pushed up the prices of Lockhart River art in ways that have threatened the enterprise's sustainability. But some of the art is good froim the bits I've seen.

Art galleries /museums still act as if we live in a pre-broadband age--exhibitions are only for those living in the region unless the exhibition goes on tour around the nation.

Maybe the Brisbane Institute will put Butler's talk on line. I guess I will probably have to buy the catalogue as there are few texts by Sally Butler on the internet.