Anna Glynn: Promiscuous Provenance
March 21 to July 12, 2020
Promiscuous Provenance will interrogate the strangeness of the early colonial artists' first encounters with the Australian landscape. Using a range of different media, artist Anna Glynn will populate her own antipodean world with strange hybrid manifestations to invoke curiosity and wonder.
Promiscuous Provenance encourages a re-examining of our relationship with our colonial past. Glynn is drawn to the work of the early colonial artists, including John Hunter, the Port Jackson Painter, and George Raper. As artists seeing a new world of flora and fauna for the first time, their works illustrate the strangeness of this encounter; in his journal, Hunter describes the creatures he sees as coming about through ‘a promiscuous intercourse between the different sexes of all these different animals’.
For an artist working in the 21st century, the inability of the colonial artists to see the Australian landscape as it was, but rather to represent their alien surroundings using known forms and animal shapes from Europe, is both beguiling and symbolic; is our identity as Australians built on a strange hybrid history, a ‘Promiscuous Provenance’?
This exhibition is proudly supported by Shoalhaven Regional Gallery
https://shoalhavenregionalgallery.com.au/
Promiscuous Provenance is a travelling exhibition from Shoalhaven Regional Gallery Nowra. This project has been assisted by the Australian Government's Visions of Australia program
For more information about Anna Glynn there is a film on YouTube and an online catalogue available.
Many thanks go to the artist Anna Glynn and Shoalhaven Regional Gallery
Anna Glynn's Promiscuous Provenance will be on display at the following venues:
Australian National Botanic Gardens, ACT, 17 January - 1 March 2020
Hahndorf Academy SA, March 21 - April 26 2020
Swan Hill Regional Gallery VIC, July 17 - August 30 2020
Hawksbury Regional Gallery, NSW, 4 September - 25 October 2020
Orange Regional Gallery, NSW, 30 October - 13 December 2020
Jervis Bay Maritime Museum, NSW, 18 December 2020 - 21 March 2021