"Inside" the Australian Indigenous Art Commission
During much of the week preceding the opening of
the Musee du Quai Branly there was considerable talk about the Aboriginal work
being installed in places that were not open to the public. Despite the
architects' repeated protestations that the work was meant to be seen from the
street, the story wasn't selling well on the
street.First of all, we'd all flown
considerable distances to attend the opening and, dammit, we wanted the chance
to inspect the work ourselves. Secondly, Judy Watson's
two halves with bailer
shell installation is
not
visible from the street. There's a blur of light that you could guess is the
work, but the surface is so highly reflective that all you can really see is the
floor and the steps underneath it. Judy's other work is clearly visible on the
glass wall of the facade at street level, but since Michael Riley's photographs
and John Mawurndjul's ceiling painting lie behind her acid-etched glass designs,
they are pretty easy to overlook unless the light is just
right.Paddy Bedford's work was
originally planned for the front of the building, left of the staff entrance.
That space is now occupied by a large bank of pipes that might provide water to
the fire service in the event of a serious conflagration. It's hard to argue
with public safety, but it's harder to see the Paddy Bedford in the alley that
fronts the service elevator for the curatorial
wing.Tommy Watson's work is in a space
at the end of the top (third) floor of the building, and from ground level you
feel like you can see about an inch of it. So we all wanted in. We wanted to
really see the work we'd come so far to
celebrate.On Friday morning, after the
opening ceremonies, we had our chance. A small, informal tour, led variously by
Hetti Perkins, Brenda Croft, and Peter Lonergan (of Cracknell and Lonergan, the
Sydney architects who were responsible for the execution of the Commission) went
through the spaces on the first through third floors. There was commentary
about the execution of each work. The Tommy Watson,done in enamel on steel
plates, was the most difficult of all, and required 18 separate firings. The
works by Gulumbu and Ningura were done on wallboard from designs gridded out and
carefully reproduced, centimeter by centimeter from a detailed plan.
The movie that we later saw at the
Embassy showed some of this happening. The artisans worked with a precise
drawing in hand, and counted dots of each color, applying them with large,
rubbery pads attached to long poles. We heard later that there was a moment of
contention during the execution of Mawurndjul's ceiling work, as in the original
there is a small area where the
rarrk
does not completely reach the edge of one of the large circles. In the original
painting, this isn't noticeable unless you're looking with a magnifying glass,
but the process of transcription to the large ceiling format acting as just such
a glass and made the moment very noticeable. The artisans claimed that they
were reproducing the work precisely and had to be convinced to make the slight
alteration required to extend the cross-hatching all the way to the edge of the
circle.Up close, the works are quite
amazing and sometimes overwhelming. It became obvious that the installation
really was meant to be seen from the distance of the street: as much as I love
Gulumbu's
garak
design, I don't think I could live with it two feet from my face at the scale
required for this installation, as I think the photographs below will
illustrate. I had been more than a little indignant earlier in the week at the
bureaucratic refusal to allow visitors inside the building for this close-up
view,and at the general notion that these magnificent examples of indigenous art
were not available to the general public, but in the end, I had to say that I
understand the architect's intent much better for finally having seen it up
close. But again, on the
picture-worth-a-thousand-words principle, here's the slide show, starting at the
first
floor. A
view of the hallway facing the street with Ningura's work. Notice that the
upper edges of the window enclosures are painted rather than being
reflections. The
large room at the east end of the building. Because of all the white in this
design, this space is almost blindingly bright and feels very open from the
inside. This
is the view of Gulumbu's painting down the hallway that runs the length of the
building's street side. The windows are to the left, and the images of
garak
that you see on the right are actually reflected in mirrors on the back wall of
the
hallway. Another
shot of the hallway, looking out the windows. From this angle you can see the
mirrors along the frame of the windows reflecting and distorting the buildings
across the street. From outside, of course, they catch the
garak. Looking
down the length of the large room at the east end of the building. I liked the
effect that you get as the image recedes in the distance. I immediately thought
of the way stars in the sky coalesce into the bright mass of the Milky Way. The
bright streak of light on the right side comes from mirrors along the top edge
of the window, which help to extend and reflect the image outward for better
viewing from the
street. I
took this shot with my back to the windows and the street side, looking into the
mirror on the back wall of the hallway. It shows how the inside of the external
wall is painted with the artist's design, which then gets reflected out by the
mirrors on the wall. It's more than a little disorienting when you're actually
in the hall, but you can see the effect if you look again at some of the street
shots in earlier
posts. Tommy
Watson's ceiling on the third floor. This is the most problematic of the rooms,
in my view. The ceiling is much lower than in the floors below, which made it
very hard to photograph. It also means that from the street perspective it's
doubly hard to see: it is the farthest away, and because the ceiling is so low,
you get very little angle on it and hence can only see a bit of the edges. The
shiny enameled finish, like that on the Judy Watson piece in the staff entrance
also means that your vision is constantly trying to disentangle the image itself
from the reflections of what is in the room. That's Bill Nuttall gazing up at
the ceiling on the left; Nyakul Dawson in his golden headband on the
right. Early
Friday morning before the opening ceremonies, the light was just right to catch
Judy Watson's acid-etched design in the glass wall of the building's facade.
The designs are based on ethnographic artifacts found in museum
collections. A
view from the side of part of the Judy Watson piece over the staff entrance.
The deep Prussian blue is exquisite when the light catches it right. The smoke
detectors and sprinkler heads that stud all of the works are quite clearly
visible in this
shot. This
is the best view of the bailer shell in Judy's piece that I was able to
snap. Paddy
Bedford's design lives in a service corridor at the west end of the building,
opposite the freight elevator. I've said before I think it's a disgrace. The
design's simplicity and balance is hard to appreciate and marred by the "window"
in the middle of it. Although the plans for this design show it exactly as it
appears, window and all, I'm deeply disappointed in the execution here.
A
closer look at the central portion of Paddy's piece. The window appears to look
out into a courtyard in the building that fronts on Avenue de la Bourdonnais,
just to the west, and which also houses administrative offices for the MQB. I
wonder what would be lost if they had plastered it over. It does allow some
light into the service corridor, which otherwise is enclosed by heavy glass
doors streetside, and open to another courtyard at its further
end. Afterwards
a small group gathered in the corridor outside the freight elevator. Left to
right, Ros Premont of Gallery Gondwana, Josh Lilley, Stephane Jacob, Margaret
Levi, and Barbara Glowczewski.
Posted: Wed - June 28, 2006 at 10:48 AM
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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.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please fee free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Jul 22, 2007 09:19 AM
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