Indigenous artists Watson and Scarce reveal layers of historical, cultural and personal gravitas behind immersive exhibitions

“The shadows that appeared on the wall were like bodies hanging from nooses,” says artist Yhonnie Scarce.

She is talking about a moment at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 2017, during the installation of her piece Death Zephyr; a nuclear cloud created from thousands of hand-blown glass yams, roughly the shape of inverted teardrops, suspended from the ceiling.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

‘It’s complicated – but you can’t shy away from it’: everything you wanted to know about pronouns (but were afraid to ask)

There’s a quiet revolution happening over how we address people, and behind…

London’s move to tier 3 ‘will put thousands of hospitality jobs at risk’

Business leaders criticise ‘illogical’ step as parts of Essex and Herts join…

Healthcare professionals in the UK have a moral duty to get the Covid jab | Frances Ryan

It is wrong that vulnerable people can be reliant on potentially infected…