I had the opportunity, thanks to some friends, to shoot some video and still photographs in the bush.
I took Isabella's (great grandmother) wind up gramophone and several other props as well as a costume which I found in my fathers favourite antique warehouse. Placing these objects in the landscape felt like a kind of colonisation. They belonged in an uncomfortable way on Taungurung country.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWIkpczJizl4PFDI-68t4hNtv4T5Y4UZzzbUbPR3xdx0QBVOfNi_UR_POO_iO1YDe_CFMzaQSCNHomCgd6bUdkrI4DBXyjuIG0GtBJGsLFiLasZK09PGU4njRZXxj0Ku6RLQNHNh2nn4s/s1600/Stranger+walking.jpg) |
Stranger 1 |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEik3coDTaMRSjwcHjY6NOIvrabgjb-NcsHcbshPTuJ_1oym4BxWgYMFH81U8Aq6uLtadA6Tyg7YYUjp1yhKgtMutrVDzlwlJP77Je2suIVyvBw-Tp9XEOAGSXTKDXgGO7ncdL75YuyPxNs/s1600/Sitting+and+sewing1.jpg) |
Sitting and sewing |
It also was interesting seeing how uncomfortable it was to wear such clothing and carry heavy Victorian furniture into the bush. I grew up in similar landscapes at the back of Eltham, Wurrundjerri country, when it was still undeveloped and was used to walking through the bush and trying not to leave a footprint, moving through the special spaces with almost no sound. Doing this work I found myself crunching noisily through the bush in the way that I imagine my ancestors did being so unused to and insensitive of this strange land when they arrived from Scotland and Ireland.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4mvc-hyxebFhDVZVDJoXK-xIMurDXmPEIS7FUuKHwMl5qHF1FawPbTT-dbb3rMG4RH9PCGn1Saf1fudFxydNOjsJpyMpALH9MKy-XCUGWzp8k-Q-F6EG-kiVvNK9x-5wNSNPmw6CAdns/s1600/Lost+and+found+3.jpg) |
Lost and found |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiTNfBumYT31CRzhypV41-Md-oh5Vx0w5L_d9NkPA8HuzrLCiGHy1bXf3hAK_aDRcrTeBuEzO7rGjvKaP6WJf-0ejuJvW8tfbi9AGeFVPlQOqYhKi70862Wzl4XRkkMtdZ3MTPIs3413YI/s1600/Walking+in+water+3.jpg) |
Walking in water |
I love the fact that you made the effort to carry in the furniture and to wear the clothing that would have been worn by our ancestors. I imagine that it would have connected you to the experience in a more profound way, much as an actor is connected to a character when they look at themselves wearing a mask in a mirror.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant Megan!!
ReplyDeleteToday... I visited South Eltham... the treat of walking silently through, I share... I haven’t been back for many, many years and as I walked, old names from school days came flooding back. Megan, I hope you’re well... thanks for your art. Do you remember?
ReplyDeleteKind regards,
Owen Morris