My Country, I Still Call Australia Home

Stranded 2011Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) will stage its largest exhibition of contemporary Indigenous Australian art when My Country, I Still Call Australia Home: Contemporary Art from Black Australia goes on display from 1 June 2013.

Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) Acting Deputy Director of Curatorial and Collection Development Maud Page said ‘My Country’ would feature more than 300 works by over 115 artists from every state and territory, as well as an interactive children’s exhibition, cinema program and community opening events including a performance by Archie Roach.

‘The exhibition will include works from the Gallery’s holdings of Indigenous Australian painting, sculpture, fibre art, Hermannsburg pottery, prints, photography, installation and video art, divided into three thematic areas that explore history, contemporary issues and physical country,’ Ms Page said.

In addition to work from the Collection by Vernon Ah Kee, Doreen Reid Nakamarra, Michael Riley, Vincent Serico, Brook Andrew, Christopher Pease, Judy Watson, Warwick Thornton, Archie Moore, Mirdidingkingathi Juwarrnda Sally Gabori, Richard Bell, Tony Albert, Dickie Minyintiri, Wakartu Cory Surprise, Destiny Deacon, Bindi Cole, Fiona Foley, Christian Thompson and many more, two new site specific installations will be commissioned for key areas in the Gallery.

‘Reko Rennie will install a major new abstract work on the GOMA foyer wall, while Megan Cope will create a large-scale map-based installation on the glass of the River Room,’ Ms Page said.

‘A community day of public programs on Saturday June 1 will mark the opening of the exhibition, featuring exhibiting artists, writers and curators, followed that night by a free Up Late event with performances by Archie Roach and The Medics featuring Bunna Lawrie of Coloured Stone.

‘Complementing ‘My Country’ is the Children’s Art Centre interactive exhibition ‘Gordon Hookey: Kangaroo Crew’, and the film program My Life as I Live It: First Peoples and Black Cinema, presented in the GOMA Cinema,’ she said.

QAGOMA Curator of Indigenous Australian Art Bruce McLean said Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists were instrumental in telling their own Australian stories.

‘This exhibition will explore how these artists present views of history, assert their presence over country, respond to contemporary politics and highlight contemporary Indigenous experiences in Australia,’ Mr McLean said.

‘The spine of the exhibition, in GOMA’s Long Gallery, will feature an expansive salon-style hang of desert paintings that will read like a map of the many Aboriginal nations across the country’s interior.’

Ms Page said the ‘Kangaroo Crew’ project would be built around a story by Gordon Hookey, featuring four kangaroos who once lived together in harmony on a hill.

‘When their home is threatened by the arrival of myna birds, the kangaroos are forced to leave and must work together to return to their home at the top of the hill. ‘The ‘Kangaroo Crew’ project will occupy the Park Level of GOMA’s Children’s Art Centre with hands-on and multimedia interactives,’ Ms Page said.

My Country, I Still Call Australia Home
Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art – Stanley Place, South Bank Brisbane
Exhibition: 1 June – 7 October 2013
Free admission

For more information, visit: www.qagoma.qld.gov.au for details.

Image: Warwick Thornton, Kaytej people, Australia | Stranded 2011 | 3D digital video: 11:06 minutes, colour, sound, 16:9 widescreen | Purchased 2011. Queensland Art Gallery Foundation | Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Image courtesy: Stills Gallery, Sydney

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