Juno Gemes at the Kluge-Ruhe
This past weekend photographer Juno Gemes and her
partner, the celebrated Australian poet Robert
Adamson, were in Charlottesville, VA in conjunction with an exhibition
at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Museum of works
selected from Proof: Portraits from the Movement
1978-2003, which was originally
organized and presented at the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra in
2003. Proof
was conceived by Andrew Sayers and Gemes for the opening of the new building of
the National Portrait Gallery at Commonwealth Place in 2003. It is a
retrospective selection of Gemes's work over twenty-five years and combines
posed portraits of individuals and groups as well as photographs from Gemes's
long career of documenting the history of the Aboriginal civil rights movement
and the various Aboriginal communities where she has spent time. Wandjuk
Marika, Marcia Langton, Jimmy Little, Yvonne Goolagong, and Kumantjayi Perkins
were among her subjects in the first category. The handback ceremonies at Uluru
and the departure of Gough Whitlam and members of the National Aboriginal
Congress in 1981 to lobby African nations to boycott the Commonwealth Games (in
support of Land Rights) are among the second, while the third comprises subjects
as diverse as children in the Block at Redfern and a family camped on the beach
at Mornington Island, awaiting the annual return of the
dunna
and
wanna
fish. In addition to the sixty-nine black and white prints, a DVD slide show of
color photography covering the same subjects is being shown in the
exhibition.On April 7, Gemes lectured
at the Kluge-Ruhe to the accompaniment of a spectacular sound-and-light show
courtesy of the unsettled spring weather we're having in the eastern United
States at the moment. The comments that follow are drawn from the notes I took
of her speech.Gemes's involvement with
photographing Aboriginal people began during the period of her residence at The
Yellow House in Sydney. She and experimental film-maker Mick Glasheen set out
in 1969 to find the traditional custodians of Uluru and to make a film that
tried to present the stories of the site in a way that would both be accessible
to white audiences as well as provide a visual interpretation for the owners
themselves. She noted with a laugh that while other members of the Yellow House
were turning its rooms into experimental artworks, she and Glasheen contributed
large scale maps of Central Australia to its avant-garde
mixture.Gemes recalled that, at this
time, images of Aboriginal people were almost completely absent from the media
in Australia, and she wondered how the two nations of Australia could ever come
to know one another when they couldn't, by and large, even see one another. Her
photography, she hoped, would be a way of introducing black culture to white
Australia. Gemes, who was born in Hungary and whose family fled that country
when she was only five years old, noted that there is no country on earth that
does not have a conflict history, but that Australia seems to have a
particularly hard time believing that truth of
itself.And so, in 1969, she hitchhiked
out to Central Australia several days in advance of Glasheen and the equipment
that they would need to make their film. She arrived at Ebenezer Downs
unannounced and sat down with her swag under a tree wondering how she would make
the initial contact. She waited until sundown, and then stood up, at which
point a group of children came running over from the Aboriginal camp and led her
back by the hand. The elders, it seemed, somehow knew of their impending
arrival, welcomed her that night, and provided support and assistance over the
next six months of filming. When she and Glasheen wanted to film at the top of
Uluru, the elders "sang" her so that she could travel safely to the crest, where
women were traditionally prohibited. When the
anangu
saw the stores of dry brown rice and tinned food the crew had brought out, they
took her and Glasheen out hunting for kangaroo. Shooting schedules for the film
became irrelevant.Along the way, Gemes
said, she became aware of the high degree of visual literacy among Aboriginal
people, and how they were constantly "reading the country." She began to ask
the people what they wanted to make pictures of, and began the approach to
photography as collaboration that characterizes much of the work in
Proof.
She came to realize the multiple uses of such photographs. Not only could they
inform that larger Australian population about the lives of contemporary
Aboriginal people, they could provide the people themselves with a new way of
capturing their history, passing down not just traditional knowledge, as
anthropological photography has often been used to do, but recording current
events for future generations, as her recent series of photographs of the
Concert for TJ
Hickey in Redfern has done.
When she returned from Central
Australia, Gemes began to research the history of photography of Aboriginal
people, going back as far as Spencer and Gillen's work in the late nineteenth
century. Later in the evening, over dinner at a local Charlottesville
restaurant with Kluge-Ruhe curator Margo Smith, Gemes expanded on this theme.
She noted that not only are the photographs important for the record of
ceremonies and camp life contained in them, but for what they tell us about the
relationship of the people to both Baldwin and Spencer. She made the keen
observation that in many of the formal pictures included in
The Photographs of Baldwin
Spencer (Miegunyah Press, 2005) one
can see the subjects looking intently, not at the camera held by Spencer, but
off to the side where Gillen, their friend and long-time associate, must have
been standing.After her all too brief
introductory remarks at Friday night's lecture, Gemes took the audience through
a digital slide show of the works from
Proof,
often quickly sketching the story behind a particular shot, or explaining for
her American audience the significance of the establishment of the Tent Embassy
in 1972, for example.The following
morning Gemes offered a tour of the photographs on display at the Kluge-Ruhe
with more extensive commentary, and gave us a look at a new body of work called
Terra
Nova. In this series she has been
collaborating with a pair of actors trained in the Japanese
butoh
tradition to present photographic images that attempt to dramatize the lives of
early white settlers in Australia. The actors have costumed themselves as early
Australian archetypes--the runaway convict, the missionary's daughter--and Gemes
has tried to capture the relationship of these often poorly documented lives to
the landscape of their new homes. In several of the early sequences in the
series, the white
butoh
makeup evokes an eerie echo of ochred indigenes, while in later shots, the
characters, trying to survive in the bush, blend into the dazzle of sun on a
waterhole or hide in the trunk of a tree burnt out by a bushfire, to the point
of almost disappearing into the
landscape.Following the morning's
gallery talk, Harvey and I had the good fortune to repair with Juno to the
cottage on the Kluge-Ruhe's grounds where she and Robert were staying for the
weekend. Adamson and Gemes are on a multi-city tour of the United States in
support of his first North American publication,
The Goldfinches of
Baghdad (Flood Editions, 2006). I
had spent the previous week reading Adamson's remarkable autobiography,
Inside Out,
which chronicles his life to the point of the publication of his first volume of
poetry in 1970, and is an extraordinary reading experience, highly recommended.
(Adamson and Gemes have collaborated on
The Language of Oysters
(Fine Art Publishing, 1997), which combines
Adamson's poems and Gemes's photographs of life on the Hawkesbury River.) We
argued over Joseph Campbell's interpretation of Aboriginal initiation rituals
(too severely Jungian to be worth much in my view), traded stories of Mornington
Island, and discussed the influence of George Bush on John Howard. We were
several hours late leaving Charlottesville for our return to Chapel Hill, and I
only wish we could have prolonged our visit with them even
further. Installation
shot of Proof: Photographs from the
Movement 1978-2003 at the
Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Museum, Charlottesville, VA, April 8 2006. To the
left is a portrait of Thancoupie, to the right, Wandjuk Marika. In the center,
an elder from Aurukun arrives, after long negotiations, for a ceremony on
Mornington Island in
1978.Proof
will be at the Kluge-Ruhe through April 29, 2006. As part of the North American
tour, Gemes will speak and show the slides from the exhibition at the Center for
Media, Culture and History of New York University on April 19. The exhibition
then returns to Australia where it will be on view at the Wollongong City Art
Gallery (20 May - 30 July 2006) and at the Monash Gallery of Art, Wheelers Hill,
Vic. (25 May - 22 July 2007).
Posted: Sun - April 9, 2006 at 02:42 PM
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A collection of personal reflections and readings on the art of the indigenous people of Australia, their culture, anthropological studies, the art market, and whatever else strays across the cultural horizon.
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Published On: Jul 22, 2007 09:19 AM
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