This Woman is Not a Car: Margaret Dodd — 1 June to 1 July 2017
6 May to 27 May 2017
Sediments
Sediments reaches to the past, present and future. For over two decades Karen Mills and Sarah Pirrie have collaborated with master practitioners and colleagues on intercultural collaborations often in response to endangered environments or contested places. Sediments is an artist-selected exhibition of works on paper. It honours Darwin’s unique artistic meeting ground on paper and by all manner of mark and printmaking, to uniquely fuse Indigenous and non-Indigenous influences. As Karen Mills says, “Paper is a way of understanding the ground as a very developed surface, a place before you put your mark on it.”
Karen Mills’s prints, made in collaboration with Basil Hall, mediate on the artist’s study of her homeland in the vast alluvial plains and waters of Sturt’s Creek in East Kimberley in a northeast corner of Western Australia and include ancient stone flakes and stone tools, while Sarah Pirrie’s exquisite watercolours depict ‘conglomerates’ found by the artist on Darwin’s urban shoreline. These random geological formations fuse together rocks of all ages and include today’s detritus. The pressure of the extreme Top End climate is the formative agent.
For over two decades Mills and Pirrie have worked with master practitioners and colleagues on intercultural collaborations often in response to rare and endangered environments. Their paths crossed in a small frontier town where every humble place has a layered and contested history. Their collaborative exhibition is one of a long-running series of exhibitions at The Cross Art Projects about independently developed conversations and exchanges.
In a philosophical sense Sediments acknowledges how nature is used and acculturated. Sarah Pirries’s watercolours are an endearing “garbolocial analysis of the world”, paradoxically making reference to the admired Vestey’s Beach shoreline outside the Museum and Art Gallery Northern Territory, associated with the annual National Aboriginal and Islander Art Awards, but reaching back to the Frontier Wars, to a zone excised from a town plan in order to house local Indigenous people and colonial cattle empires. Later the site was part of a famous land rights struggle to create the Kulaluk Aboriginal Community.
Karen Mills’s painterly prints made in collaboration with her friend Basil Hall link to her time shared with senior Kimberley painter Kitty Mararvie, linking their joint family genealogy to flints found across the great mud plains of Sturt Creek, a large drainage basin to Lake Gregory, the traditional land of Malarvie’s Jaru heritage. Theirs is a story about recent colonial history, about surviving dispossession and diaspora from ancestral land, now part of a large pastoral lease.
The artists’ conversation began twenty years ago at Charles Darwin University when Karen Mills and her drawing lecturer Sarah Pirrie sketched at Darwin’s Botanical Gardens. These were remarkable times in Darwin and at the university where studios and gardens hummed with the presence of groups of Aboriginal artists from the Kimberley, Arnhem Land and Central Australia. Mills and Pirrie were inspired by talks with visiting artists Queenie McKenzie, Rover Thomas and Freddie Timms, pioneers whose unique synthesis of gesture and form and symbol exploded onto a world stage. Their world was alive with the mix of colleagues and lecturers. There was Judy Watson who with Emily Kame Kgnwarreye and Yvonne Koolmatrie comprised the all woman exhibition at the Australian Pavilion in Venice in 1997 to honour the thirtieth anniversary of the 1967 national referendum on Aboriginal citizenship. There were leading Indonesian artist and activist Dadang Christanto and master printer Basil Hall at Northern Editions Workshop.
Adding to the ferment was the revolutionary ”Kuljia/Business Conference and Workshops’, a massive conference involving all remote Contemporary Aboriginal Art Centres (organised by Arnhem, Northern and Kimberley Artists ANKA) expanding creative practices and considering Indigenous Art within the complex categories of Culture and Industry. As a record, participants created the Meeting Place Mural (toured by Artback NT in 1998).
In 2015 Karen Mills and Sarah Pirrie were part of a small interdisciplinary team of artists and botanists assembled by Darwin curator and educator Angus Cameron for the exhibition Secret World: Carnivorous plants of the Howard sand sheets at Nomad Art Projects. The Howard sand sheets, located on Darwin’s doorstep, are threatened by sand mining. The sands host many unique and threatened plant and animal species including rare carnivorous plants (Utricularia species) and the Howard River Toadlet. Yet the pink sands make for quick and easy excavation of sand to mix the foundations of Darwin’s politically expedient “jobs and growth” development at all costs culture.
Mills and Pirrie continue their dialogue and support for each other’s practice and investigations as each artist brilliantly prompts us to consider site and sight, vision and meditation, memory and idea and point to the need to keep hold of tradition and originality.
Karen Mills
Karen Mills was born in Katherine, Northern Territory, in 1960, and grew up in South Australia. After leaving home Mills returned to the Northern Territory to reconnect with family and her Indigenous cultural heritage. She lives and works in Darwin. Her work has been featured in exhibitions nationally and internationally and is currently part of The National at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. She featured in Tarnanthi – Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art (2015), at the Art Gallery of South Australia. Mills’s paintings and etchings explore concepts about identity, connection and disconnection with culture, geology and Australian history. She creates layered, textured surfaces to depict experiences and memories of being in different places, journeys across country and observation of the landscape. Mills is a descendant of the Balanggarra people of the Oombulgurri and Forrest River Aboriginal Reserves, near Wyndham, Western Australia. The history and landscape of the East Kimberley is a significant influence on her work.
Sarah Pirrie
Sarah Pirrie is a Darwin-based artist with an innovative and cross-disciplinary art practice that embraces conceptual, site-responsive and often collaborative projects. Sarah’s artwork has referenced a range of social and environmental issues and is often shaped by local activity and phenomena. Her current research focuses on transformative acts of waste and notions of environmental damage and looks at contemporary notions of environmental aesthetics. In 2014 she participated in a collaborative exchange and reciprocal residency with internationally renowned Indonesian Arts Collective ‘ruangrupa’ producing bus stop interventions as part of 2014 Darwin Festival project ‘Temporary Territory’. In 2014-15 she was part of Botanica, a large exhibition presenting the work of Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists from Darwin, Alice Springs and the Katherine region whose imagery focuses on plant forms, native flora and the minutiae of their immediate environment. (Curator Cath Bowdler. Katherine and at Chan Contemporary Art Space, Darwin Festival 2015.)
Thank you
The Cross Art Projects thanks Karen Mills for initiating the exhibition, Sarah Pirrie thanks Nomad Art who originated her Terra Forma works and Karen Mills thanks Basil Hall for his inspiring collaboration on her works.
Holden with Hair Curlers, Bridal Holden, Ravaged Holden from This Woman is Not a Car series, Margaret Dodd, 1977
Hoon Holden, ceramic car, Margaret Dodd, 1977
Margaret Dodd and her work The Fossil, Greg Weight, 2002 ©
Reproduction of This Woman is Not a Car screenprint poster, Jan Mackay, 1981
Margaret Dodd is an Australian artist, who graduated from the University of California, Davis in 1968, where she was part of the ‘funk ceramics’ movement and was inspired by fellow artists producing experimental films. She began making her ceramic Holden series and film This Woman is Not a Car, in response to the bleak suburban life for women she found, living in Holden Hill, Adelaide on her return from the US to Australia. The Experimental Art Foundation, Jam Factory and Women’s Art Movement of 1970s Adelaide were all influential in supporting and shaping her art practice. Dodd continues to explore the symbol of the Holden car to look at national identity, masculinity and female identity, and the politics of the survival of the planet. Her work is held in major collections around the country as well as institutions in the USA and Canada.
Susan Charlton has curated the exhibition and Sydney Film Festival screening, and edited the catalogue for This Woman is Not a Car: Margaret Dodd. Charlton is a curator and arts/culture writer who works in archives, galleries, museums and communities. She was Women’s Filmworker at Sydney Filmmakers Co-operative, from 1982-84 working with women filmmakers and their films.
This Woman is Not a Car: Margaret Dodd coincides with the cinema screening of the film at Sydney Film Festival, as part of the Feminism & Film program of works from the women’s movement in Sydney in the 1970s and 80s curated by Susan Charlton. Screenings: Sat 10 June 12.30; Sun 18 June at Art Gallery of NSW, with screenings 10.30 am (starting with TWINAC) and ‘Suffragette City’ talks at 1 pm.
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Installation view. Photo by Kim Scott, Moon Cube Design
Downloads
Susan Charlton, Feminism & Film program, Sydney Film Festival, 2017. Full program of screenings and talks. > Download as pdf
Sneak peak of exhibition catalogue (select pages only) > Download as pdf Free copies of full catalogue available at gallery.
28 June 2017- Joanna Mendelssohn, Celebrating the Feminist Holden, The Conversation. > Download as pdf
Links
Holden Car Links
Paul Wagner, Holden Museum at Canowindra – http://www.australiaforvisitors.com/canowindra-motors-holden-museum.html
Postscript
Kate Blackmore’s film The Woman and the Car, about artist and filmmaker Margaret Dodd, was screening on ABC TV (11 Februrary 2020) as part of the Hive series) and then via iView. (Check local guides.) Blackmore’s film, produced by Bridget Ikin for the 2018 Adelaide Film Festival, ‘looks at motherhood and mobility, film and feminism, through the prism of Margaret Dodd’s classic’ short film This Woman is Not a Car from 1982.
In 2017 The Cross Art Projects exhibited This Woman is Not a Car: Margaret Dodd, curated by Susan Charlton, featuring Dodd’s infamous ceramic Holden’s and film of the same name. The exhibition then showed at ACE Open in Adelaide, where Blackmore’s 2014 film Girls was also screening. Inspired by seeing Dodd’s 1982 work, Blackmore made The Woman and the Car for the 2018 Adelaide Film Festival.
Here’s a trailer for Margaret Dodd’s original film This Woman is Not a Car from 1982 :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HPYYxXFqZ8
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.