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works
by Jonathon Jones
Jonathan
Jones: lumination
The incandescent
sculptures and sewn images by Sydney-based Kamilaroi/Wiradjuri artist
Jonathan Jones weave together the many strands of contemporary Australian
experience. At first sight they exist as coolly minimal forms, transformations
of the everyday materials of cotton thread and electrical paraphernalia
into installations of compelling beauty. Yet, like the seductive landscapes
of Western Desert artists that celebrate the travels of the Tingari ancestors,
Joness lightmaps chart the journeys and indicia of connections that
characterise our present day social networks.
By night, Sydney is a city of lights, mirrored in the blackness of the
harbour it surrounds. This setting was the scene for one of the most enduringly
evocative accounts from the days of the First Fleet when early colonists
observed from the shores of Port Jackson the Cadigal people night fishing,
and the constellation of iridescent lights cast in the still dark water
by the fires in their canoes. For the 2003 Primavera exhibition at the
Museum of Contemporary Art - appropriately located on Circular Quay -
Jones constructed a vast landscape of suspended light globes representing
the north headland of Bondi Beach. In graphing the lights that mark the
nocturnal contours of human habitation, Jones reversed the role of the
observer by creating a lightpanorama of present day occupation.
Concepts of light and dark, like black and white, are riven with prejudice
and compromised by shadow. Jones creates a conceptual framework to express
the symbiotic relationship of community and the individual. And,
although the resonance of light suggests the living human presence, that
when united beams more brightly, so too the works serve as a memento mori
to those whose past lives continue to light our way.
Joness intervention in the mechanical processes of electricity and
manufacturing infuse his systems of representation with an organic energy.
Through repetition, Joness patterns release a kinetic force analogous
with the cumulative glow of clustered light bulbs. In Aboriginal ceremonial
life, where participation is structured according to the position of the
individual within the community, cultural affirmation is conducted and
achieved through reiteration. From within these nuclei of society
like the collective brilliance of overlapping light sources emanates
a radiance that illuminates the darkness that surrounds us.
Hetti Perkins - Curator, Aboriginal + Torres Strait Islander Art, Art
Gallery of New South Wales, Australia
September
2003
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Detail -
untitled 2002 flourescent lights
90cm x 90cm x 90cm, Sherman Artbox, Paddington, Sydney 'served chiled'
2002
for information
about works, please contact the artist - tempest@netspace.net.au
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