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Emily Kame Kngwarreye, ‘Untitled (Alhalkere),’ 1989 Tate, purchased with funds provided by Lady Sarah Atcherley in honor of Simon Mordant 2019. © Estate of Emily Kame Kngwarreye / DACS 2020, All rights reserved

Tate Modern spotlights a continent in A Year in Art: Australia 1992

Emily Kame Kngwarreye, ‘Untitled (Alhalkere),’ 1989 Tate, purchased with funds provided by Lady Sarah Atcherley in honor of Simon Mordant 2019. © Estate of Emily Kame Kngwarreye / DACS 2020, All rights reserved
Emily Kame Kngwarreye, ‘Untitled (Alhalkere),’ 1989, Tate, bought with funds provided by Lady Sarah Atcherley in honor of Simon Mordant 2019. © Estate of Emily Kame Kngwarreye/DACS 2020, All rights reserved

LONDON – Tate Modern has opened A Year in Art: Australia 1992, a free exhibition of more than 25 works by Australian artists, many on show for the first time in the UK, to explore debates around land rights and the ongoing legacies of colonialism. It takes as its starting point the High Court of Australia’s landmark 1992 Mabo ruling in favour of five Meriam people including Edward Koiki Mabo. This decision overturned terra nullius (meaning ‘land belonging to nobody’), the doctrine on which the British had justified colonizing the land now known as Australia. The exhibition brings together works from Tate’s collection which explore Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ relationship with their lands, as well as colonization’s continuing impact on issues of representation, social injustice, and climate emergency. The exhibit will continue until spring 2022.

A Year in Art: Australia 1992 begins by examining how custodianship of the land and inheritance of culture is reflected in art practices today. In Untitled (Alhalkere), 1989, Emily Kame Kngwarreye expresses her cultural life as an Anmatyerre elder and her intricate relationship to country, while in The Leap/ Watershed, from 2017, Dale Harding blows ochre onto a large canvas to reference both the life-giving attributes of the land and the 1867 massacre of Aboriginal people in Mackay, Queensland. The exhibition also reflects on the continent’s long history, highlighting the richness of the world’s longest continuous living cultures, which reach back at least 65,000 years. Gordon Bennett’s Possession Island (Abstraction), 1991, is presented in dialogue with Algernon Talmage’s romantic imaginings of colonialism in The Founding of Australia 1788 1937, questioning how popular myths are replicated and reinforced in depictions of Australia’s colonization. These works are accompanied by a series of Bennett’s remarkable etchings showing the ongoing complexities of colonization in contemporary life, and a video by Peter Kennedy and John Hughes, which addresses the history of white management, capitalism, and institutionalization in regard to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander rights.

 Tracey Moffatt, [no title], from ‘Up in the Sky,’ 1997, Tate, purchased 1998, © Tracey Moffatt

Tracey Moffatt, [no title], from ‘Up in the Sky,’ 1997, Tate, purchased 1998, © Tracey Moffatt
Tracey Moffatt’s photographic series Up in the Sky 1997, speaks to the forced separations of Aboriginal families by government agencies, known as the Stolen Generations. Australia’s relationship with British colonial legacies is further explored through Helen Johnson’s use of satirical political cartoons in Seat of Power, 2016, while Judy Watson incorporates official documents in a preponderance of aboriginal blood, a 2005 work that highlights the history of systemic racism towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. At the heart of the exhibition is Vernon Ah Kee’s poignant 2010 four-screen video installation, tall man, which shows powerful footage of the protests and riots following the death in custody of Mulrunji Doomadgee on Palm Island in 2004, highlighting a pattern of civil injustice.
Judy Watson, ‘a preponderance of aboriginal blood,’ 2005, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Tate, with support from the Qantas Foundation in 2015, purchased 2016 © Judy Watson, Photograph: Jessica Maurer
Judy Watson, ‘a preponderance of aboriginal blood,’ 2005, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Tate, with support from the Qantas Foundation in 2015, purchased 2016 © Judy Watson, Photograph: Jessica Maurer

Many of the featured works were jointly acquired by Tate and the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia through an innovative partnership established in 2015 via a gift from the Qantas Foundation. In the past year these joint acquisitions have included John Mawurndjul’s 1989 bark painting Buluwana, Female Ancestor, created with a fine cross-hatching technique used by generations of Kuninjku artists, as well as a recording of Bonita Ely’s 1979 performance Jabiluka U02, which addresses environmental concerns about the extraction of natural resources in the context of native title. Her work focuses on the campaigning ignited by the Mirrar people, the traditional owners of Jabiluka, against plans to mine uranium in the Kimberley flood plain in the Northern Territory. Both of these works are now being shown for the first time in the UK, with Ely’s filmed performance also shown concurrently at the MCA in Sydney as part of a major new exhibition, Perspectives on place.

Bonita Ely, ‘Jabiluka UO₂,’ 1979, Camera: Andrew Scollo. Performers: Bonita Ely with Charles Green & William Winford. Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Tate, with support from the Qantas Foundation in 2015, purchased 2020 © Bonita Ely
Bonita Ely, ‘Jabiluka UO₂,’ 1979. Camera operator: Andrew Scollo. Performers: Bonita Ely with Charles Green and William Winford. Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Tate, with support from the Qantas Foundation in 2015, purchased 2020 © Bonita Ely

Australia 1992 reflects Tate’s commitment to transnational research and is one of many ongoing projects informed by the work of the Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational – launched in January 2019 as part of a long-term partnership between Tate and Hyundai Motor. Additional public programming led by the centre this season included Blackness in Contemporary Art Practice, an online seminar convened by Portia Malatjie, Adjunct Curator of Africa and African Diaspora at the Centre. This seminar investigated ways in which contemporary African artists, curators, and writers deal with the question of Blackness in their work through relationships with spirituality, ancestry, colonialism, and Black womanhood.

John Mawurndjul, ‘Buluwana, Female Ancestor,’ 1989, Image courtesy Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, photograph: Jessica Maurer © John Mawurndjul / Copyright Agency
John Mawurndjul, ‘Buluwana, Female Ancestor,’ 1989, Image courtesy Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, photograph: Jessica Maurer © John Mawurndjul / Copyright Agency

A Year in Art: Australia 1992 is co-curated by Sook-Kyung Lee, Senior Curator, International Art (Hyundai Tate Research Centre); Valentina Ravaglia, Curator, Displays & International Art; Tamsin Hong, Assistant Curator, Performance, Tate Modern. It is the second instalment in Tate Modern’s series of A Year in Art displays, following A Year in Art: 1973, which considered how art was used as a form of protest in response to the 1973 coup d’etat in Chile.

See the Tate Modern website and its page for the exhibit A Year in Art: Australia 1992.