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100
Merilyn Fairskye
Aqua/ocean/ship, 2009
from 100
3:00 minute loop, single channel video
edition of 5

Merilyn Fairskye »

100

Exhibition: 19 Aug – 19 Sep 2009

Stills Gallery

36 Gosbell Street . Paddington
NSW 2021 Sydney

+61 2-93317775


www.stillsgallery.com.au

Wed-Sat 11-17

100
Merilyn Fairskye
Fieldwork II (Chernobyl), 2009
from 100
100:00 minute, single channel video projection
edition of 5

In this exciting new video work 100 Merilyn Fairskye continues her longstanding interest in the relationship between the still and the moving image. As in her most recent works, Stati D'Animo (2005-07) and Aqua (2007) time and duration are explored in different ways.

The title of the exhibition refers to the expected lifetime of 100 years of a replacement containment shell about to be built over Reactor 4 at Chernobyl in the Ukraine. Three new works feature projections on various surfaces. Filmed in diverse locations, the work explores some of the central challenges of contemporary life, such as the workable coexistence between people, technology and the environment.

In Fieldwork I each large screen panoramic image appears static until, over time, subtle movement becomes visible. The featured locations are, the Three Sisters at Echo Point (Katoomba, Australia), Menkaure's Pyramid at Giza, (Egypt) and Pripyat, looking across to Reactor 4 in Chernobyl (Ukraine). Each of these places is enveloped by myths (a false Dreamtime legend about three sisters was created in 1942 to boost tourism in the Blue Mountains), denials (a steel and concrete shell was built after the Chernobyl disaster to contain the radiation) and absences.

In Fieldwork II Fairskye draws a direct connection to one of the locations in Fieldwork I. Employing a handheld tracking shot from a taxi window she videos a long row of abandoned houses on the road into Chernobyl which are still contaminated by radiation. She slows down this footage significantly with a software program creating an optical illusion. We see an endless array of the toxic houses covered in snow, like ghostly white mirages awaiting a more permanent burial.

Aqua/ocean (a two screen diptych) depicts water, a recurring motif in Fairskye's work. People (surfers) are immersed in different bodies of ocean. A rainbow arches across an overcast sky. A boat moves in and out of frame. Suggestions and associations are set up between all of the works that trigger enquiry and reverie, a favorite methodology of the artist.