Title
Eyes and storms 24
2012
printed 2013
Artist
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Details
- Dates
- 2012
printed 2013 - Media category
- Photograph
- Materials used
- ilfachrome print
- Edition
- 1/2
- Dimensions
- 125.0 x 125.0 cm
- Credit
- Gift of Julia Champtaloup and Andrew Rothery 2017
- Location
- South Building, ground level, Grand Courts
- Accession number
- 529.2017
- Copyright
- © Simryn Gill
- Artist information
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Simryn Gill
Works in the collection
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About
Simryn Gill is one of Australia’s leading artists. She explores the contemporary postcolonial condition and our experience of place, history and culture through various media but has a particular affiliation with the photographic medium. In Eyes and storms, the series from which this work derives, Gill has photographed pit mines, dams, remote lakes and waterholes to afford the viewer a unique aerial perspective. Seen from above, having been shot from a small plane, the images maintain an intimate connection with the land. It is from this elevation that the open pit mines appear as orifices on the surface of the earth, or as the artist alludes to in the work’s title, eyes in the landscape.
In keeping with the concerns of her previous work, the photographs bring nature and culture together in a way that assertively shifts the thresholds between the two. The ruinous effect of human intervention into natural processes is evident in the deep striations and faults in formation. In Eyes and storms the scars in the landscape are presented not only as a sign of disturbance but also possess alarming beauty.
Considering the poignancy of this body of work and its subject, Anthropologist Michael Taussig wrote in 2013 ‘when miners mine the earth on the unbelievable scale shown in these photographs, they are undertaking time-space travel … to the life force that pulses through your body … as well as through the images provided by Gill soaring like a lost angel above the sublime debris of the once-was.’
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
Critical Mass: The art of planetary health, Blue Mountains Cultural Centre, Katoomba, 03 Oct 2020–06 Dec 2020