Forest explores colonialism’s impact on Australian bio-diversity. In the work, the artists have undertaken giant graphite and charcoal rubbings from... Read More
Forest explores
colonialism’s impact on Australian bio-diversity. In the work, the artists have
undertaken giant graphite and charcoal rubbings from an Angophera Forest in
North Sydney, on the traditional lands of the Cammeraygal people. Their work
involves an intimate engagement with, and a celebration of, the indigenous
natural world, still surviving in pockets of remnant bushland, despite the massive
and ongoing impact of white settlement.
The giant drawings are set into ink-dyed lengths of silk. The trees are
life size, so resonate a personal relationship to viewers, but simultaneously, dwarf
their human counterparts, reversing the usual hierarchy.