David Hume - Woomera
My work is often compared to Indigenous art. In
the past I have been careful to explain its origins in a very Western way,
but this new work must acknowledge an indigenous presence if it is not to perpetuate
further injustices. I have always felt it important to be sure that my work
did not misappropriate items that should be the exclusive domain of indigenous
culture, and while this is still the case I want to advance, with caution,
to a time in which it will be possible to produce work that is described not
as Western or Indigenous, but simply as Australian.
These works are based on topographical images and symbols, showing
the land as seen from an aerial view. They chronicle the scraping and digging,
the etching into the land and the journeys across it that accompanied the building
of the outback township of Woomera in the 1940s. Surrounded by vast and ancient
emptiness, Woomera was originally intended to be a stronghold for rocket testing,
built to propel Australia into the future; its secrets closely guarded and
its workings often veiled…
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Click on any image to see a larger version
Woomera #1
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90 cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #2
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90 cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #3
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
225cm x 120 cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #4
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
180cm x 90cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #5
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #6
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2004 |
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Woomera #7
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
180cm x 90cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #8
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
240cm x 90cm 2004
private collection |
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Woomera #9
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2004 |
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Woomera #10
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
135cm x 60cm 2004 |
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Woomera #11
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
135cm x 60cm 2004 |
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Woomera #12
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #13
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2005 |
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Woomera #14
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #15
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2005
private collection |
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Woomera #16
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #17
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
90cm x 90cm 2005 |
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Woomera #18
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #19
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #20
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
75cm x 75cm 2005 |
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Woomera #21
Acrylic on
Galvanised Steel
225cm x 120 cm 2005 |
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Woomera
The Woomera paintings of 2004-5 have their origin in trips that I made through
that region in 1996 while working on the Andamooka series
of paintings shown in 1997.
Woomera is to me a mythic place. It sits at the edge of the outback, on the
border between the yellow land of the coast and the red land of the centre.
The town was borne of the Anglo-Australian Joint Project, laid out in 1948
as a base from which the threat of the Russia’s growing nuclear capabilities
could be met. The government of Britain felt that a nuclear deterrent was needed,
and the British rockets that would carry these nuclear warheads were to be
tested here.
I wanted to document this time, which seems in retrospect a simpler one than
that in which we live today, but it should be remembered that it was also a
time of great and real fear that nuclear calamity was imminent.
The small community here is also akin to an Atlantis – there is evidence
here of skills and powers that are now lost. Australia at that time could design
and build its own aeroplane from scratch, and was able even to build a satellite.
This time has passed, and the recent time when Woomera housed a detention centre
has also has passed from this place that was built largely by post-war refugees.
The next phase of its life may well be a nuclear dump, which seems a role that
will have an impact on a geological time scale in a way that previous events
have not.
The journeys I seek to mark in this work belong to indigenous Australians
as well as non-indigenous. Because similarities between my work and Indigenous
work have been remarked, I have been particular in explaining, in a very Western
way, the origins of what I have done. Perhaps because I grew up in the time
of the Papunya Tula paintings of the 1980s and 1990s, I felt it important to
be sure that my work did not misappropriate items that should be the exclusive
domain of Indigenous culture. I think that now we should be able to advance,
with caution, beyond that time.
I see the desert areas of Australia as rich, vibrant and beautiful places,
full of life and stories, and this is a view that is not now unusual. It is
a view, also, that has developed along with our increasing awareness of the
unique relationship that indigenous Australians have with their country. This
is not the only source of this these feelings – the love of the land
that in non-indigenous people who live there is genuine and should be celebrated – but
to deny that this influence has come in part from our contact with Indigenous
culture would be to perpetrate another injustice.
So where to next? I think that the division of landscape painting into the
rigid classifications of Western and Indigenous needs to be reconsidered. I
hope that while painting in these established areas continues to flourish,
there is also room at their edges for new work, in which ideas can be exchanged
and new relationships can develop.
These ideas led to a talk given at the 2004 Adelaide Festival Fringe – Directions
in Australian Landscape Painting; Towards the Post-Western?, the edited
text of which may be downloaded as PDF from the link above.
David Hume, February 2005
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