DOMINION
Exhibition dates: 9 November 2023 to 30 June 2024.
Opening hours: Monday to Friday 10am - 4pm. FREE ENTRY
Location: Arts West Gallery, Ground Level, Arts West Building, University of Melbourne, Parkville.
About the exhibition
DOMINION brings together six contemporary artists with artworks from the collections of the University of Melbourne, and The Johnston Collection, to reinvigorate notions of dominion as a space for power which exists beyond confines of time and the singular notion of humanity. It is one that breaches concepts of both the political and sublime to reveal the corporeal being beyond the temporal and subcelestial. The subjectivities arising out of the Enlightenment, and subsequently problematised in European Romanticism, are renegotiated through the narratives of the artists.
Enlightenment thought wrestled with notions of the human and the inhuman, brought into focus by the increasing intensity of European encounters with non European people. The visual and material culture of the European eighteenth century is suffused with a brittle elegance that masks deep injustices. The polite trappings of the age of sociability – refined furniture, porcelain vessels for the consumption of imported hot beverages, witty small-scale porcelain sculptures – are witnesses to ugly truths and failings.
The contemporary artists in this exhibition upend received colonial hegemonies. Responding to the visionary cosmic imaginings of Romantic artists William Blake and John Martin, the revolutionary imagination and vision of the human is found in the illustrations of Safdar Ahmed. Here, the real and imagined, the political and Divine collapse to reveal the pressing issues of our era. Post-colonial discourses remain entangled in the remnants of Romanticism in a beautiful and bewildering spiral which cuts to the heart of our shared humanity. Hadieh Shafie’s meticulously stacked and rolled pages remind us that this story is something that is both hidden and known. Inside these pages, Shafie writes the word eshgh (love) repetitively, as though coaxing, or willing us to choose love.
Abdul-Rahman Abdullah offers a conversation between worlds, one which stretches the imagination to embrace the notion of the unthinkable journey, and the way in which this is grounded in recollections of migration and the movement of bodies across the globe and beyond. Extending and transforming the eighteenth-century tradition of porcelain sculpture as a vehicle for political discourse, Penny Byrne’s reimagined porcelain figures revisit this global human movement, where the stillness of the ones fleeing is disturbing as much as it is absurd. The repurposing of twentieth century figures derived from an eighteenth-century artform reminds us of the violence and despair of displacement. However, in a single gesture, Byrne is able to reorientate the in/humanity to moments of justice and joy.
Michael Riley’s devastatingly beautiful Empire is a glorious vision of the divinity of a living earth, and of the ruins of Christian colonialism, consolidated through a hauntingly beautiful landscape inhabited by the living and the dead. Riley insists on the eternal sacrality of Sovereign land. This idea is echoed in Richard Bell’s short film which is loaded with fierce truth-telling cloaked in biting humour. Bell transcends the demand to engage in the counternarratives of colonialism and instead summons his Sovereign position to direct the conversation to Indigenous empowerment.
Here, we re-imagine a contemporary Dominion, as a de-location of hegemony, as something activated in real time and across time, as a place of despair and joy, and of resilience and power.
Featured Artists
Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Safdar Ahmed, Richard Bell, Penny Byrne, Michael Riley and Hadieh Shafie.
Featured content
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the land on which this exhibition is held, the Wurundjeri Woiwurrung peoples of the Kulin nation. We pay our respects to Elders past, present and future, and acknowledge the importance of Indigenous Knowledge in the Academy.
DOMINION is commissioned by the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Contemporary Culture (ERCC) Research Unit, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne.
Curators
Nur Shkembi, Dr Matthew Martin, Dr David Sequeira
Producer
Anita Archer
Major Partners
University of Melbourne Faculty of Arts
Melbourne Public Humanities Initiative
Supporters
ABC Archives
Being Human Festival
Fiona & Sidney Myer Gallery
Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation
Milani Gallery
Moore Contemporary
Murdoch University Art Collection
Museums and Collections, University of Melbourne
Prints Collection, Archives and Special Collections, University of Melbourne
School of Culture and Communication
The Johnston Collection
Yavuz Gallery
Exhibition photography by Claudia Chalupka, House Studios.
Image: Dr Matthew Martin, Dr Anita Archer and Nur Shkembi. Photography by Claudia Chalupka, House Studios.
Want to know more?
For more information about this exhibition, contact the exhibition curators