Forgetfulness and Thunder. A mixed-media Installation. This new body of work grew out of the culture shock and heightened sense of cultural awareness undergone by the artist since moving to the Territory. The exhibition is an immersive experience featuring low-tech projections using overhead transparencies, wall mounted transparencies and other layered images.
Forgetfulness and Thunder
a mixed-media Installation
David LeMay's mesmerising installation explores the conjunction of memory,
family and landscape. This new body of work grew out of the culture shock
and heightened sense of cultural awareness undergone by the artist since
moving to the Territory. The exhibition is an immersive experience featuring
low-tech projections using overhead transparencies, wall mounted
transparencies and other layered images.
The works in Forgetfulness and Thunder represent a meld of past and present
where one image merges with the other creating a multi faceted, ambiguous
whole. Incorporating the experience of landscape as the substructure for the
development of ideas the artist explores nostalgia as well as referencing
Paul Carter's notions of a migrant aesthetic .
The artists states: While living in the Territory certain images from the
past, from before I was born and not long after, have become increasingly
significant to me. The reasons for this are varied but what is of interest
here is how they have filtered their way into my work that was ostensibly
concerned with landscape. As figurative elements they internalise the
reading of the landscape while simultaneously the landscape externalises
their intimacy, projecting it, as it were, to the sublime limits of the
horizon. It is in this indeterminable space that the exhibition,
Forgetfulness and Thunder dwells.
Launch: 6pm Friday 10 May
Artist Talk in the gallery 25 May 12.00pm
Gallery viewing hours are Wed - Fri 10am - 6pm Sat 10
am - 2pm or by appointment.
For more info contact Cath Bowdler or Fiona
Cocks Ph (08) 89815368
24HR Art is financially assisted by the NT Government
through the Department of the Arts and Museums and the Australia Council,
the Federal Government's arts funding and advisory body.
24HR Art, Northern Territory Centre for Contemporary Art, Vimy
Lane, Parap, Darwin.