Art & the Feminist Project
Vol 14 no 1
Very popular issue looking at art and women's issues. Reprinted. Articles examine difference, women looking at women, heresies, women and nation. Includes new statistics. Reviews.
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Memories of a Nebula
Author: Mr Steve Wigg, reviewFountain installation by Derek Kreckler
Experimental Art Foundation
Adelaide South Australia
2-24 December 1993 and 11-23 January 1994
It is a peculiar function of mind that it privileges certain events of our past, edits out others, packages them and strings them together to form a seamless whole - our memories.
Living as we do in a culture which rotates pleasure about a yearly cycle of the summer holiday, most of our pleasant experiences happened in the heat; winter, associated with school and work, recedes. The memories of our youth are predestined to be high contrast, in full sunlight, the shadows so dark as to black out half the faces, just like the photos you took on your first plastic camera - of your cousins doing acrobatics at the beach, no doubt.
So it is with Kreckler, who has described just such a memory he possesses, framed it in an A4 sheet and pasted it on the wall of the gallery as part of his installation, Fountain. It tells of standing by the railing at Circular Quay in the Sixties, watching aboriginal boys dive for money thrown into the water by a crowd gathered there. An image naturalised into the Sixties. How many black-and-white movies have we seen with such scenes? Sophia Loren in Greece, Audrey Hepburn in Italy, Bogart somewhere in Asia musing wistfully as the natives in the middle distance (with grins, always with grins) dive from the appropriate pieces of landscape for coins. Here too, as in Kreckler's memory, the same sterilising sunlight suffuses the imagery.
Various elements from this memory have been mapped by Kreckler into objects in the installation, interfering with the familiar space the scenario occupies in the social. Dominant are the coins, which exist in this instance as a vast set of copper coins combed by him into an image of the Crab Nebula covering most of the gallery floor.
The immediate effect of this incident - the memory - opening itself out into an event so enormous as the Crab Nebula is that it becomes a victim of its own excess; emptying itself of any signifying function whatsoever. But this is also the sea floor from which the boys lifted their coins. The gallery becomes a sort of aquarium: we are walking underwater. Here the installation works at a level which few installations achieve: it operates as a device which, in its utilisation of space, must be read by the body ("You had to be there"). This ability to consider the viewer as performer carries the signature of Kreckler's own experience as a performance artist - his other persona.
The Crab Nebula also happens to be composed of light. Each coin is a sun, millions of light years away. When we look at it we are looking at the past - a living memory, in fact. The obverse of light is darkness, absence. Opposite the A4 sheet, on the other wall, are a number of large stains: the result of ochre being flooded with water, of aboriginal children in the ocean. This dissolution, this loss, this darkness is the other side of the memory, the side unstated elsewhere, which lends the installation its resonance.
Articles in this issue
- Artrave: Artrave
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Book review: Sight Lines

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Feature: A View from the Other Side - Five Women West Australian Artists

- Feature: Bush Women: Narrative Paintings from Outback Western Australia
- Feature: Fatal Attractions: Women and Technology: Norma Wight, Edite Vidins and Lyndall Milani
- Feature: Filipina Migranteng Manggagawa: Feminism, Art and Advocacy in the Philippines
- Feature: HER-ESIES Ancient and Modern
- Feature: Image Bank: The Feminist Project
- Feature: Jillian Davey: Stories on Canvas
- Feature: Knocking on the Inside: Heather Ellyard, Annette Bezor, Janette Moore and Anna Platten
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Feature: Making (A) Difference: Suffrage Year Celebrations and the Visual Arts in New Zealand

- Feature: Nola Farman: The Challenge Continues
- Feature: Re-orienting Feminism in Aotearoa
- Feature: Sadomaschism, Art and the Lesbian Sexual revolution
- Feature: Shedding Skins: Identity and 'Lesbian' Art Practice
- Feature: Someday, Somewhere - Women and Nation in International Art
- Feature: Speaking the Ineffable: New Directions in Performance Art
- Feature: The Art World: More Than a Foothold
- Feature: The Changing Face of Australian Women
- Feature: The Engagement of the Personal
- Feature: The Horror of the Prose: Some Reflection on a Paper entitled The Horror of the Gaze
- Feature: The Price of Liberty
- Feature: Trapped in Paradise - Some Women Artists in Tasmania
- Feature: Update: Projects of Women and Art
- Feature: What Should We Do With The 'Women and Art' Elective?
- Feature review: Nourishment for Tough Times: Bring A Plate Conference
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Review: A Woman's Story: Hunting Grounds

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Review: Bad Girls: Institute of Contemporary Art London

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Review: Different Dreaming

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Review: En-Gendering Resistance: Opening Moves with Game Girl

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Review: Far Beyond First Impressions

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Review: Memorial to the Survivors

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Review: Memories of a Nebula

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Review: Modest Perfection

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Review: More Light (Goethe's last words)

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Review: Porn Shop Art Adventures

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Review: Printmaking and Optimism

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Review: Reaffirming Identity

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Review: Revelations of a decade

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Review: Surviving the first 12 months: Swing Bridge Art Gallery Dunally

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Review: The Amazingness of Women to JUST DO IT

