Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Description


We live in a world of man-made ‘worlds’ for example the art, natural, political and historical worlds, these ‘worlds’ are of our making and we could not function without them. Without them we would be lost, reduced to the ‘world view of an oyster’ for example, perceiving a mass of undifferentiated, unidentified information, which means little.

This work is an investigation into how we understand our ‘world’, associations and contexts in relation to nature are complicated and mixed up. Here I am interested in looking at our relationship with nature as a manifestation of the romantic landscape tradition and how this has created a distancing through the idea of the view.

Here the context is the historical idea of landscape as dominated by the image of a single human figure surveying 'his' domain, separated from 'his' surroundings, as can be seen in the work of 19th Century German artist Caspar David Friedrich. This situation reflects an idea of landscape as an object to be surveyed, used and dominated.

In this work this idea is subverted here landscape exerts its right for identification as an entity, containing its own view of itself with rights, a voice and an awareness of its right to exist and be recognised. 

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Artwork as Merchandise / greeting-card project / Desert Union



Through the ‘Landscape Unions’ the mechanisms of politics are subverted as a symbolic gesture of power and ownership. ‘Landscape’ by its nature cannot be pined down in terms of ownership in the same way that ‘land’ can. It belongs to the viewer and doesn’t at the same time.

Artwork as Merchandise / greeting-card project / Desert Union 2012
All cards are BLANK inside for your text

Landscape Unions / Desert Union set of 10 greeting-cards




Landscape Unions / Desert Union box set of 10 greeting-cards

Landscape Unions / Desert Union box set of 10 greeting-cards




Tuesday, 31 January 2012

About Landscape Unions

Historically positioned within the romantic landscape tradition, this work spans the historic bridge between a 'Casparesc' image of the single human figure surveying his domain, separated from nature, the idea of an immersive relationship with nature and one where nature takes up the mantel and has a voice, a consciousness of its own.
 
This work is designed to provide a shift in the way we relate to and see nature, be it mountains, desert, woodland, bog, marsh etc. and to provide a vehicle for expressing that shift, it offers an idealistic redress of that situation, using a human political relationship mechanism 'The Union' as the means.
 
By creating of a series of ‘Landscape Unions’ - Desert Union,  Mountain Union, Bog Union, United Forests and Woodlands etc. the mechanisms of politics are subverted as a symbolic gesture for the transition of power and ownership back to nature.

Here I have used photography and drawing to create objects and murals for installation in different spaces as evidence of this idea, the works consist of paraphernalia and are temporary in nature.
 
This line of thinking came about because of a residency in the outback mining town of Broken Hill NSW Australia, through the Broken Hill Art Exchange in May 2011 and by the work of Austrian / Australian nineteenth century artist Eugen von Guérard, which I came across in the Regional Art Museum of Ballarat Victoria in 2010.
von  Guérard is an important part of the artistic establishment in Australia though is little known in Europe today. This project explores the positioning of power in relation to our perception of nature and how that perception is influenced by historical colonial perspectives and ideas about landscape.
 
By using an existing strategy of the union to create a paradoxical situation to expose the possibility of a perceptual shift in relation to our relationship with nature. In Desert Union, for example, the animals, plants, rocks and birds are symbolic representatives for an attempted individualization and actualization of the desert, as it attempts to assert its position or point of view through a ‘de-positioning’ process using the union as a vehicle for realizing this.
 
Evidence of a colonial interpretation of the desert landscape can be seen through the introduction of viewing points into the desert, for example, a vast open landscape, which is the same in every direction for 100s of kilometers. This exposes a particular colonial interpretation and positioning of the desert landscape, in which the viewer is the central focal point, separated and distanced from nature. This can also be seen in the way the desert has been categorized and mediated for our engagement and entertainment. Documentation of these strategies explore the positioning of the desert and how it is understood.
Sarah Iremonger 2012