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Details
- Date
- 2019
- Media category
- Materials used
- hand-painted pigment print on three sheets
- Edition
- edition 4 of 8 + 2 artist’s proofs
- Dimensions
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98.0 x 324.0 cm
:
a - panel 1, 98 x 108 cm
b - panel 2, 98 x 108 cm
c - panel 3, 98 x 108 cm
- Credit
- Purchased with funds provided by the Contemporary Collection Benefactors 2019
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 222.2019.a-c
- Copyright
- © Joan Ross
- Artist information
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Joan Ross
Works in the collection
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About
Joan Ross is a Sydney-based multidisciplinary artist whose practice includes video, virtual reality, installation, drawing and digital printmaking. Her work quotes colonial, scientific and art-historical references, re-working them with the addition or removal of visual elements to create new meaning. A signature feature of Ross’ work is her use of fluorescent ‘hi-vis’ yellow, a colour with associations of surveillance, authority and danger. Using humour and the absurd, she takes a critical look at Australia’s colonial past and contemporary Australian commodity culture.
Warra Warra Wai 2019 relates to an artwork - We have sung the same songs for millions of years - commissioned by the AGNSW for the hoarding surrounding the Sydney Modern building site, erected in late 2019. Both works pay homage to the longevity of the planet while recognising our human connections to place. This imaginative view of Sydney Harbour is not topographically accurate but quotes drawings and prints of the harbour made by colonial-era artist Joseph Lycett, including a watercolour in the AGNSW collection (View of the Heads, at the entrance into Port Jackson c 1822).
The land and its animals speak to us in English and Indigenous language. The birds – carriers of knowledge – represent both the endurance of Indigenous culture and the ancient history of Australia’s endemic plants and animals. Indigenous figures share the space with settlers in Regency dress, including a naturalist, signifying the Enlightenment urge to collect, classify and name nature. The ‘hi-vis’ fluorescent yellow colour symbolises authority and control and is a metaphor for colonisation. Elements from contemporary life, including the party decorations and cakes, construction cranes and warning signs inject an element of sardonic humour into an epic tale of longevity and change. -
Exhibition history
Shown in 2 exhibitions
Joan Ross: collector's paradise, Michael Reid Sydney, Chippendale, 08 Aug 2019–31 Aug 2019
SMP Interstitials, Art Gallery of New South Wales, North Building, Sydney, 03 Dec 2022–01 Sep 2023