Fables of Change. Australian photography.
V International Festival of Photography - PhotoVisa
Hoda Afshar » Ray Cook » Simon Harsent » Owen Leong »
Exhibition: 1 Oct – 30 Nov 2013
Krasnodar Institute of Contemporary Art (KISI)
Krasnodar
Four Australian photomedia artists will present their work at the celebrated Russian festival, PhotoVisa. This year the festival’s theme is ‘Climate Change’ and the organisers have encouraged a broad reading of the concept. Curated by Alasdair Foster, the Australian exhibition explores ideas that range across the personal, social, cultural and environmental.
The artists, Hoda Afshar, Ray Cook, Simon Harsent and Owen Leong, each approach the theme through visual allegory to create fables that address variously hybridity, metamorphosis, dissolution and adaptation.
Hoda Afshar questions the notion of being ‘Australian’ and the way in which immigrant cultures are expected to ‘fit in’; creating a hybrid identity that is not always comfortable or consistent. She does this by drawing on the imagery of ancient Persian painting to depict the classic tropes of the ‘Aussie’ way of life.
Ray Cook has, throughout his oeuvre, explored the changing lot of a minority at odds with the norms of the majority. It is a story of resistance and survival through adaptation. When ridiculed become a clown; when shunned from the light, wear shadows with style; turn kitsch into beauty and secrecy into the bond of brotherhood.
Simon Harsent, in his series ‘Melt’, presents portraits of icebergs as they travel Greenland’s Ilulissat Icefjord. The ecological story is, of course, that more sections are breaking away from the arctic ice cap and melting faster due to global warming. But the chronicle of the iceberg is, for the artist, also a metaphorical reflection upon his own mortality.
Owen Leong explores attitudes to East-Asian people in Australia through the visual metaphor of the Bogong moth, which, on occasion, migrates south to Australia in large swarms. While the overt narrative critiques notions of immigration as infestation, the lyrical metamorphosis he effects sets the prejudice and the reality of human difference in subtle contradistinction.
‘FABLES OF CHANGE’ will be presented at the Krasnodar Institute of Contemporary Art (KISI) in October and November 2013.