AbstractsAstronomy & Space Science

Beneath Horizons: Australian Desert Landscape

by Julia Featherstone




Institution: University of New South Wales
Department: Art
Year: 2014
Keywords: Shadows; Australian Desert Landscape; Red desert project; Alien objects; Horizon; Shelter; Immersion; Song of sand; Leaves of time; Red sand
Record ID: 1046669
Full text PDF: http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/53796


Abstract

While playing classical piano music written by European composers in arid Winton, QLD, my mother grew up wishing she was elsewhere. In 1929, aged thirteen years, her dedication to the European canon was rewarded with a music Diploma and the right to append the letters A.L.C.M. by the London College of Music (see fig. 44). My mother was not alone in her desire for recognition and acclaim by European culture. White Australians obsession with British and European culture, landscape and history throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth centuries, is well documented. In fact, the tendency to deny those aspects of Australian reality that are perceived to be strange, unpalatable or inconvenient continues in Australia today. My research Beneath Horizons: Australian Desert Landscapes, analyses certain preconceptions, such as fear of a vast and dangerous void, that are held by many urban-dwelling Australians who cling to the metaphorical rim of the continent, rarely venturing inside to experience the desert for themselves. Consequently, our concept of the desert is configured from cultural histories, mythologies, maps, televisual and cinematic constructs. We imagine the desert, but without going there. We don���t immerse ourselves in the desert space, experience the freedom of endless space, or see expansive horizons that activate our senses and transform the desert into a spiritual place. The installation Red Desert Project for example, offers urban-dwellers a micro-experience of being out there in the red sand desert. My research focused on the ground beneath me to locate my presence as an observer at a particular time and place in the desert landscape. I engaged daily with the forces of nature that continually transformed the desert floor of that place. I made three journeys to the desert, camping in remote sites significant to colonial explorers to experiment and record my experiences with the forces of nature and to map ever-changing details of the living desert. I wanted to gain insights into why my mother avoided the arid landscape of her childhood and why most Australians avoid the central deserts of Australia. This research aimed to map the perceived emptiness of the desert landscape and contribute to an increased perception and awareness of the movement of time and space in the imagined desert landscape of Australia, so that people may be encouraged to treat the land, along with its Indigenous custodians, with more insight, empathy and respect.