Exhibition
26.06.09 - 18.07.09
Front Gallery
NEWELL HARRY
Alms & Psalms: The Unspoken Requiems of Henry Waller
ARTIST'S TALK: Monday, June 29, 6.00pm
Institute of Post-Colonial Studies, 78-80 Curzon St, Nth Melbourne
Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces is pleased to present
this new exhibition by Sydney-based artist Newell Harry.
Beginning with the phrase ‘the natives are restless’, Harry
refers to the cultural agitation bought about by colonial
migration. In this exhibition he refers to the island
castaway as a metaphor to express the complexity in his
discussions of identity, nomadism, dislocation and the
myths associated with sea trade and colonial adventure.
As Harry states 'The castaway is an apt metaphor for the artist, or at least I see it that way in terms of my own sense of narrative,
place and family history. Like the castaway, dislocation, exile and exclusion signify a removal, not by choice, but
by sheer coincidence and in the case of my family, an escape from the political oppressions of Apartheid. Like the
artist, the castaway’s position also is one of an enforced self-sufficiency, labour and adaptability; a realm where
humility is paramount and behaving like king shit of turd island is out of the question. '
Typically Harry’s work draws in some way from his own mixed ancestry - his mother is from port city of Cape
Town, and he has Mauritian blood among other cultural affiliations. This jumbled ancestry is indicative of
humanity’s restless movement along the trade routes, embodying in it the many narratives of colonial commerce,
the slave trade, diaspora, - inter-marriage and the merging and dividing of race and culture. Harry’s work reflects
the history of this human movement, exploring the myriad motivations for migration, conjuring tales of escape
from conflict, the quest for booty, or following the optimism of the prospector.
In this exhibition, Harry continues his work with anagrams. Here he dissects and reorganises the term ‘The
natives are restless’, so that it morphs into ‘The artless native seers’ or ‘As venereal theists rest’ presenting an
analogy for the infinite combinations of circumstance, skin, cultures and of beliefs that are the spin off from
colonial migration.
Using a motley assortment of sandblasted bottles engraved with anagrams, place names and un/known
‘Coloured’ identities such as Capetonian gang lords, musicians, fashion models and black porn stars, Harry
conjures up the romance of the message in a bottle as well as the underworld adventures of mutineers, pirates
and rumrunners during prohibition. Here, a play on the history of booze as ‘currency’ takes on skewed
interpretations.
In this textured, sprawling exhibition, Harry explores the concept of heritage - both real and imagined, spinning
and riffing on the mythologies of cultural association.
Newell Harry received his MFA University of NSW (2004) and has undertaken residencies in Paris and Cape
Town. Selected exhibitions include: MCA New Acquisitions, (2009) (forthcoming); Fish or Cut Bait? (2008) Roslyn
Oxley9, Sydney; News from Islands (2007), curated Aaron Seeto, Campbelltown City Art Gallery, Sydney; Views
from the Couch (2007), Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney; I would have a lot to do but I don’t do much (2006), MOP
Projects, Sydney; Rectangular Ghost (2006), curated Amanda Rowell, Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney. His work is held
by MCA, Newcastle Region Art Gallery, Queensland Art Gallery, Wollongong Universi¬ty, Artbank and the Ergas
Collection as well as a number of private collections in Australia. He is represented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery,
Sydney |