Cockatoo Island - the once dilapidated penal and maritime precinct in Sydney Harbour - is being magically transformed. Biennale Artistic Director Gerald McMaster is sauntering around the Island quietly contemplating works of art when we speak, however solitude and reverie here requires an extreme measure of patience as the forgotten island is also the habitat for angry birds.
“The seagulls sound very hungry,” McMaster observes, and with the compassion of a Zen Master he prefers to describe the
ungodly din during our interview as “a chorus”. In fact, it is this relational
and compassionate approach that forms the prevailing mood for this year’s 18th
Biennale of Sydney, one hundred artists from all around the globe working in a
collaborative manner and “representing the Biennale themes which include
migration, contamination, corruption and coercion.”
McMaster,
speaking a little louder now, explains the melodious soft humming emanating
from inside a series of bee-hives tiled Swarm
(ASX). “We have to turn the volume up very high in order to fully
contemplate the scale and pitch of this work”. He is describing a poetic
installation by UK based artist Alec Finlay, however this time it isn’t the chorus
of silver gulls he compensates for but the chorus of artist enthusiasms, “the
critical mass of artists and volunteers are arriving and installing their
works, it’s amazing.”
Finlay is
an artist, poet and publisher passionate about social and natural
“fluctuations” in a time of climate change. In collaboration with sound artist
Chris Watson they have installed ten wooden beehives on the lawns in the upper
island precinct and each hive has an internal speaker inside, projecting an
audio of honey bees which changes in tenor and volume according to the “live”
parallel fluctuations of the Global Stock Exchange. McMaster suggests this is a
reference to human responses to natural disasters like tsunamis and earthquakes.
“Knock on the Sky, Listen to The Sound is
an installation by New Zealand artist Tiffany Singh comprising an array of wind
chimes,” he continues.” Tiffany’s title is also a Buddhist expression; we had
to find a site here for the work here where the wind is best, where it
can be both gentle and strong.”
As McMaster
details to me the diverse spiritual dimensions to Singh’s work a strange
silence prevails, the chorus of gulls falls into pausa, silence- I begin to appreciate the curator’s sensibility – together
we notice the feint tinkling of chimes trickling through the stillness.
“There is
a feeling of sadness here”, he reflects while gazing at an overgrown boat ramp,
“this place has been abandoned for a long while. Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi
comes from the 400-year old Mughal Miniaturist tradition and is transforming
this old ramp with intricate acrylic drawings that echo the plant life
engulfing it. Imran describes that his approach to making art is to collaborate
closely with nature’s forces, this work is titled, They Shimmer Still.
“This[is}the
most exciting part of the curatorial process so far”, he reveals, prompted by
the bee hive’s, the miniature patterning and murmuring wind chimes; “artists
and hundreds of volunteer art students enthusiastically collaborating, changing
the landscape. Nature is slowly repossessing this island, the artist’s are
renewing it.”
Catherine de Zegher and Gerald McMaster, Artistic Directors of the 18th
Biennale of Sydney (2012)- all our relations.
Various Locations including Cockatoo Island,
The Art Gallery of New South Wales and The Museum of Contemporary Art. For more information:
FREE: From 27 June until 16 September 2012.
Image Top - Tiffany Singh, Knock on the Sky, Listen to the Sound, 2012.
Image Bottom- Gerald McMaster
Image Bottom- Gerald McMaster
First Published Drum Media Issue 1116 26 June 2012
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