Occupy Conversations — Talking Portraits (2013/15)

Authors

  • Cameron Bishop Deakin University, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/ps2015vol1no1art458

Keywords:

occupation, creative practice, remediation

Abstract

This ‘work is based around a series of remediations – paintings reanimated through film; a dialogue recontextualised through two paintings; a film remade through a montage of images. Translating content through media in this way re-materialises and radicalizes these works. When the seemingly lighthearted dialogue between Sigrid Thorton and Brian Dennehy in The Man From Snowy River II is decontextualized we notice their topic of discussion is not only strangely to secure pastoral land, but more ominously the commodification of the female body. Bishop offers a second lens through which to view this exchange when he videos a couple in the same poses as Thomas Bock’s paintings’ Manalargenna (1837) and Eliza Langhorne (1849) rehearsing the dialogue. Translated to this medium the dialogue is sutured to a history of violent dispossession – a far cry from the romantic notion of pioneering Australia envisioned through the film’.[1]
There is an occupation at play here, of the body as a medium for an other’s ideologies, only they are confused in the merging of technologies and subjectivities. These two can only ever rehearse their identities.

[1] Luciana Pangrazio, ‘Flatpak Australia’, catalogue essay in Cameron Bishop: Heteromania, Academy Gallery, University of Tasmania, 2013.

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Author Biography

  • Cameron Bishop, Deakin University, Australia

    Cameron Bishop is an artist and academic at Deakin University in Melbourne. Over the last 15 years he has exhibited artwork, collaboratively and individually, in Australia and overseas. He has written a number of artist catalogue essays, book chapters and journal articles. In his art and writing he has explored notions of identity and its connection to place, including issues around exclusion. This has led to an interest in critical occupancies and the shifting role of the artist in rapidly changing cultural and technological circumstances. 

Published

2015-04-30

Issue

Section

Creative Practice

How to Cite

Occupy Conversations — Talking Portraits (2013/15). (2015). Persona Studies, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.21153/ps2015vol1no1art458