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New artworks illuminate the University's past and reimagine its future

4 March 2019
Public art connecting past and future cultural roots
A new collection of public artworks by Dale Harding has been installed at the University's Camperdown campus. The artworks reflect Australia's cultural roots, the artist's heritage and the University's history.
Spine 2 2018 outside the F23 Administration Building.

Spine 2 2018 outside the F23 Administration Building.听

Dale Harding has transformed the City Road gateway to the Camperdown campus through a collection of new public artworks to reflect Australia鈥檚 ancient cultural roots, his own heritage, and .

Artist Dale Harding

Artist Dale Harding.

Dale Harding is a descendent of the Bidjara, Garingal and Ghungalu peoples of Central Queensland. His artwork fuses traditional and contemporary techniques to highlight opportunities for shared thinking between the University and the Indigenous culture surrounding it.

Spine 1 (universe): Life, Earth and Environmental Sciences (LEES) foyer

is now home to听Spine 1 (universe), an art installation that consists of petrified tree logs and wall paintings.

The materials, colours and techniques Dale employs tell as much about the history of Indigenous Australia as the artworks themselves. Dale used an atomiser to blow pigment onto the wall 鈥 this technique of applying pigment to spray was made famous by Australian artist Sidney Nolan, who learned about this method after seeing the rock art of Dale鈥檚 country at Carnarvon Gorge in 1948.

"The paintings are literally illustrations of my breath," said Dale Harding.听

鈥淭he paintings are literally illustrations of my breath,鈥 says Dale. 鈥淭he petrified tree links to the Moreton Bay fig trees lining City Road which are important to the shared thinking about this site that houses Environmental Sciences. Many relations 鈥 scientific, historic, cultural, spiritual and philosophical 鈥 are embedded between the living trees and the petrified trunk."

Spine 1 (universe) 2018 by Dale Harding.

Spine 1 (universe)听2018. This artwork consists of petrified tree logs and the above wall paintings in the LEES foyer.

The specific colours and materials Dale has used for each of his works also has meaning. The pigments used for the LEES building artworks 鈥 vivianite, lapis lazuli, azurite, Italian yellow ochre and hematite 鈥 reflect diverse histories, traditions and cultures.

鈥淭his pigment is all-but immovable in the natural environment and has been important to art histories the world over,鈥 says Dale.

鈥淚 remember when Dale finished the work (for LEES), he told me he thought of it as a gift to the students,鈥 says , Dean of Science. 鈥淔or those inclined to engage with it, he envisaged them standing by a 25 million-year-old log, perhaps with a hand on it, looking upwards, so that they might experience a new relationship to time, the self and the universe.鈥

Spine 2: Eastern Avenue

Dale鈥檚 artwork also seeks to connects Aboriginal country with the University鈥檚 buildings. This connection can be seen in the sandstone-based artwork,听Spine 2.

Spine 2 2018. This artwork is an acknowledgment of the Great Dividing Range.听

鈥淭he work is an acknowledgement of the Great Dividing Range 鈥 the sandstone country that rises and falls along the spine of eastern Australia. Many of the University buildings have been built from this sandstone,鈥 says Dale.

鈥淢y work seeks to make connections between the University campus and the sandstone that joins cultures and communities up and down the east of the continent,鈥 he explains. 鈥淗ere, two sandstone blocks sit side-by-side, with no hierarchy.鈥

A key part of Dale鈥檚 work is its integration with the landscape. The native planting component is a collaboration between Dale and the University鈥檚 Grounds team. It will be undertaken in March when the weather is cooler.

Spine 3 (radiance): Carslaw Building

Spine 3 (radiance)

Spine 3 (radiance) 2018.听Materials used 鈥 concrete, concrete oxide, hematite.

The new art installation outside the ,听Spine 3 (radiance), is also complemented by botanical elements.

鈥淚 begin with a line of inheritance in rock art, but I am not bound to the rock art of my ancestors. Instead, my work is aligned to contemporary practice with different histories and new materials,鈥 explains Dale.

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