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Songlines for a Sunburnt Country #1 (2017) (Detail 1) |
Songlines for a Sunburnt Country #1 (2017) (Detail 2) |
Songlines for a Sunburnt Country #1 (2017) (Detail 3) |
Notes:
One of Webb's more cryptic works, this image has a blurred background of maps, book pages and newspaper articles about Australian issues, partly covering portions of a musical score (an "unfinished composition" labelled as "for you Bruce").
Images from other works also appear here - especially the sun and moon icons from the Tripych series - such as Interior Sun (2015) and Bungle Bungle moon (2015).
Small dark figures appear to lurk among the images, but it can be hard to tell whether these are intended as letters, musical notes, figures, or trees. Perhaps this visual dissonance is intended.
Australian context: One of the most iconic Australian books of the twentieth century - not written by an Australian at all - was Bruce Chatwin's 1987 Songlines. From Wikipedia: In the book Chatwin develops his thesis about the primordial nature of Aboriginal song. The writing does not shy away from the actual condition of life for present day indigenous Australians, it does not present the songlines as a new-age fad but from an appreciation of the art and culture of the people for whom they are the keystone of the Real. While the book's first half chronicles the main character's travels through Outback Australia and his various encounters, the second half is dedicated to his musings on the nature of man as nomad and city builder. This work juxtaposes the fluid songlines of Aboriginal peoples and the rigid musical staves ('songlines' that look like fences) of the colonial peoples in further comment on the wide gap between the cultural and land use philosophies of these very different groups. Although clearly a homage to Chatwin's Songlines, Webb's Songlines for a Sunburnt Country #1 (and #2) - through its links to others in the series - suggests that Webb's whole Australia Series may be his own contribution to the conversation that Chatwin's book began within the non-Aboriginal Australian community about the history and significance of the land that makes up the Big Red Country. The other part of the title of this work was inspired by Dorothea Mackellar (1885–1968) and her much loved ode to her homeland, written when she was far away. In My Country she writes: I love a sunburnt country, |