Cultural exchanges in Australia ~
I was in Brisbane last week ~ And with business done…
I couldn’t resist popping into the Queensland Art Gallery for a quick look!
It fascinates me how they’re able to have such a beautiful big water feature in amongst their delicate art works! For the longevity of the exhibits the building is constantly monitored for atmospheric changes to ensure the works are never too hot nor too humid; so how, I wonder, do they keep humidity in check with all that water in the building? 🙂
I liked the juxtaposition of this display composition.
Two interpretations from two different cultures.
Yet all made in the same place at the same time from the same source of materials ~
All the craft-works in this group have been made in Queensland, about the turn of the nineteenth/twentieth centuries, from local timber materials ~
The shields and the woven basket made by the indigenous population,
and the tilt top table made by a migrant Joseph Soblusky.
Such beautiful designs and patterns from two cultural perspectives ~
I’m always taken by Margaret Preston’s work ~ I particularly love her renditions of native Australian flora, so this image of Sturt Desert Peas caught my eye.
However, the obvious indigenous influences in this work, painted in 1943, has in more recent times attracted criticism of her applying cultural designs without understanding their meanings.
Back out of the gallery and on my way home, I thought this was a nice little detail on the South Brisbane railway station ~ The platform benches with a QR (Queensland Rail) insignia.
😀
Journey Jottings:
Where/When/How ~ What did I See, Hear, Smell, Touch, Taste?
- Queensland Art Gallery, June 2010, quick side-visit
- native timbers organically patterned with ochres / hewn structure
- echoes of soft voices, whispering around the all encompassing space
- history
- cultural exchanges
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