when: 26 November 2022 - 17 December 2022 | venue: The Cross Art Projects | cost: Free | address: 8 Llankelly Place, Potts Point NSW 2011 | website: https://www.crossart.com.au/
published: 01 Dec 2022, 5 min read
This showcased event has concluded.
Expired
The exhibition RISE3: Mangrove Thinking is part three in a series that flags sea-level rise and the ways that artists think with forms of art to make 'invisible' impacts of climate change visible. Mangroves, seagrass beds and coral reefs work together with tides and currents, rising and falling like lungs. The reefs protect the seagrass beds and mangroves and coasts from strong ocean waves, cyclones and tsunami.
RISE3: Mangrove Thinking introduces the art of Muluymuluy Wirrpanda the younger sister of acclaimed artist Ms. M. Wirrpanda, a learned and generous mentor for many. The Yolngu sisters are elders of the Dhudi-Djapu clan of the Dhuwa moiety of north east Arnhem Land. Art by the sisters presents the beauty and fragility of the earth and its ecosystems: here, the interconnection of mangroves with molluscs in the tidal zone. The leaves falling from dense branches circulate nutrients; their art shares the knowledge.
Muluymuluy's paintings have power and presence: created by a restrained use of the classic oche colours of yellow, white and black and striking compositions that highlight the complex architecture of roots and leaves. Roots form intricate arches, buttresses and tangled cables; counter-balanced by dense branches and canopy. The roots filter nitrates and phosphates from the streams and enable breathing in several ways down to small pneumatophores or snorkel roots.
Ms Wirrpanda was a revolutionary artist and key to many of the most prescient exhibitions of the past decade: the cross-cultural Djalkiri: We are standing on their names - Blue Mud Bay (Nomad, Darwin 2013 and tour including to UTS Gallery Sydney); Ms Wirrpanda and John Wolsley Midawarr/Harvest (National Museum of Australia, 2017) and Molluscs / Maypal and the warming of the seas at Geelong Art Gallery, based on James Bentley's magnificent book for collectors and children, Maypal, Mayali Ga Wänga: Shellfish, Meaning & Place (NAILSMA, 2018). Her works are astoundingly beautiful and painterly.
Will Stubbs' essay Gathul-gärri / Into the Mangroves (2022) likens the joy of entering a cool forest to entering a cathedral. Artist Ruby Djikarra Alderton's video shows a childhood of adventure and freedom playing amongst these magical trees and swimming in their golden waters.2 Ruby warns that the exquisite balance of the Gulf of Carpentaria's mangrove ecosystem is failing. The ghostly death of the mangrove forests began along 1000km of the coast in late 2015 and continues. Sea-levels fell dramatically when the wet storm winds failed. Now the level is again dramatically rising. Rise and fall, rise and fail.
Content from UpNext.com.au. Please don't scrape website.
The exhibition RISE3: Mangrove Thinking is part three in a series that flags sea-level rise and the ways that artists think with forms of art to make 'invisible' impacts of climate change visible. Mangroves, seagrass beds and coral reefs work together with tides and currents, rising and falling like lungs. The reefs protect the seagrass beds and mangroves and coasts from strong ocean waves, cyclones and tsunami.
RISE3: Mangrove Thinking introduces the art of Muluymuluy Wirrpanda the younger sister of acclaimed artist Ms. M. Wirrpanda, a learned and generous mentor for many. The Yolngu sisters are elders of the Dhudi-Djapu clan of the Dhuwa moiety of north east Arnhem Land. Art by the sisters presents the beauty and fragility of the earth and its ecosystems: here, the interconnection of mangroves with molluscs in the tidal zone. The leaves falling from dense branches circulate nutrients; their art shares the knowledge.
Muluymuluy's paintings have power and presence: created by a restrained use of the classic oche colours of yellow, white and black and striking compositions that highlight the complex architecture of roots and leaves. Roots form intricate arches, buttresses and tangled cables; counter-balanced by dense branches and canopy. The roots filter nitrates and phosphates from the streams and enable breathing in several ways down to small pneumatophores or snorkel roots.
Ms Wirrpanda was a revolutionary artist and key to many of the most prescient exhibitions of the past decade: the cross-cultural Djalkiri: We are standing on their names - Blue Mud Bay (Nomad, Darwin 2013 and tour including to UTS Gallery Sydney); Ms Wirrpanda and John Wolsley Midawarr/Harvest (National Museum of Australia, 2017) and Molluscs / Maypal and the warming of the seas at Geelong Art Gallery, based on James Bentley's magnificent book for collectors and children, Maypal, Mayali Ga Wänga: Shellfish, Meaning & Place (NAILSMA, 2018). Her works are astoundingly beautiful and painterly.
Will Stubbs' essay Gathul-gärri / Into the Mangroves (2022) likens the joy of entering a cool forest to entering a cathedral. Artist Ruby Djikarra Alderton's video shows a childhood of adventure and freedom playing amongst these magical trees and swimming in their golden waters.2 Ruby warns that the exquisite balance of the Gulf of Carpentaria's mangrove ecosystem is failing. The ghostly death of the mangrove forests began along 1000km of the coast in late 2015 and continues. Sea-levels fell dramatically when the wet storm winds failed. Now the level is again dramatically rising. Rise and fall, rise and fail.
Go see RISE3: Mangrove Thinking 2022.
RISE3: Mangrove Thinking 2022 is on 26 November 2022 - 17 December 2022. See start and end times below. Conveniently located in Potts Point. Call 02 9357 2058 for details. Visit their website at https://www.crossart.com.au/.
Are we missing something? Help us improve this article. Reach out to us.
Event Details
Are you looking for 'Things To Do' ideas?
Upnext Team
We love helping people
See recent events discovered by Upnext Team
Expired
Adelaide Tiny Home Expo 2023
Discover Tiny Houses and why they are taking Australia by storm. Tiny houses on and off wheels, luxury Airbnb models, m...
Expired
Drag Bingo & Cocktail Fun! 2023
Celebrate a Sunday afternoon with Bingo with a difference...Drag Bingo.Join hosts Fifi and Princess Laya as they perform...
Expired
Have You Eaten? 2023
Have You Eaten? is an immersive art exhibition that invites you to consider your perfect picnic, favourite foods, and co...
Expired
Punk Protest Propaganda 2023
Discover The Political Art of Fahmi Reza, a captivating exhibition at Nexus Gallery.Fahmi Reza, a self-taught Malaysian ...