Exhibition

EREWHON

Margaret Lawrence Gallery

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EREWHON

Artists: Brook Andrew, MIkala Dwyer and Justene Williams, Tony Garifalakis, Claire Lambe, Clare Milledge. 

Erewhon is the (almost) return of Neverwhere, an exhibition that travelled to Istanbul last year, commissioned by Asialink as part of the Australia Year in Turkey. Neverwhere presented the work of eight contemporary Australian artists that disturbed distinctions between our real and imagined selves, and between the authentic and the proposed. Narratives were informed by external – and often mysterious – forces, both seen and unseen; the exhibition shifted registers between sincerity and satire although its propensity was to shadowy psychological turns. And it is farther in this direction – towards the darker, more charged imaginings – that the work in Erewhon leads us.

More correctly, of course, Erewhon is the (not quite syntactically correct) return of ‘Nowhere’ and title of a novel by Samuel Butler, first published anonymously in 1872. Erewhon was set in a fictional eponymous country – though one that strongly resembled the south of New Zealand in which Butler lived as a young man. The story provided a satire (and philosophical exploration) of various aspects of Victorian society, most notably crime and punishment, religion and science. For example, according to Erewhonian law, offenders were treated as if they were ill, whereas ill people were looked upon as criminals. Another feature of Erewhon was the absence of machines due to the widely shared belief by the Erewhonians that they were potentially dangerous. These ideas – among others (the effects of colonization, technological progress, the impossibility of utopias, discipline and control) – form both the thesis and the point of departure for the exhibition Erewhon.

A NETS Victoria and Asialink Arts touring exhibition.

Curator: Vikki McInnes.

Image Credit:

MIKALA DWYER and JUSTENE WILLIAMS

Captain Thunderbolt’s Sisters

2010

Film still from single channel video, 1:08:40mins, 4:3, black and white, sound

Courtesy of the artists and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

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