SPIRIT
& VISION
Jenny
Fraser - - -
“Fraser’s
works are intelligent and witty, with a wicked sense of humour that
belies the seriousness of her approach. For example, her deeply iconic
Faster Foods critiques the fast food industry and consumerism, references
Australia’s choice of national symbolism and the QANTAS logo,
and raises questions about the appropriateness of hoofed animals in
Australia and this country’s entrenched eating habits. Because
her image taps into so many existing representations of the kangaroo,
both literal and metaphorical, it’s possible to read it on many
levels, despite its surface simplicity. With Faster Foods Fraser has
succeeded—very cleverly—in appropriating the appropriators.
When I asked Jenny Fraser whether she could identify special reasons
why Indigenous artists might deploy new media in their artistic practice,
or if this was simply a matter of personal preference, her response
was “Why not?” (Touché!) New media is attractive
because of its “instant” qualities, she writes, and she
also enjoys the collaborative nature of working in this currently under-explored
terrain."
Christine
Nicholls
from 'Digital
Indigeneity, Indigenous New Media Arts', Part 2: Rea, Jenny Fraser,
Christian B. Thompson, in Real Time + Onscreen, Open City, Sydney, Australia
ISSN 1321-4799, pp 20-21
“None
of us exist outside of power, none of us exist outside of the military-media-industrial
complex, none of us are free from the globalised economies of exploitation
and oppression - there’s no point in pretending that we are. For
some of us, that inclusion is the only inclusion we ever experience.
In problematising cultural politics as a ‘zero-sum game’,
Dorinne Kondo identifies that “any oppositional gesture is inevitably
recuperated in the juggernaut of commodity capitalism.” While
opposition can be both ‘contestatory and complicit’, that
opposition does ‘constitute a subversion that matters’.
As part of that subversion, Fraser makes a choice to push through the
narrow focus of the polity and symbolic order. Among the subversions
she enacts is to make art out of everyday life, to foreground other
everyday lives - to appropriate, culture jam and offer alternatives
– and to subsequently locate in everyday life so much that matters."
by Linda
Carroli 2003
from the
exhibition catalogue 'not
really queenz'land' 2003
|
risin' above it 2002
digital photomontage lightbox
Courtesy of the artist and Fire-works Gallery
fasterfood 2002
Photomontage in Lightbox - 126cm x 91cm
Courtesy of the Artist and Fire-Works
Gallery
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