Crossing
over
162 x171 cms. Medium: Charcoal, charcoal pencil, collage, on Dessin
300gsm paper
Lauryn
Arnott
I
arrived in Adelaide, Australia, in 2003 having lost my home to a
brutal regime in Zimbabwe, Africa. In Adelaide I started the Crossing
Over
drawing as part of a Masters of Visual Arts degree. This drawing
became a site of remembering
and forgetting memories through a process of drawing and erasure.
My methodology became a physical enactment of the state that I found
myself in, a process of working through persistent memories,
acknowledged and unacknowledged, a retrieval of history as memory and
memory as history.
This process works as a catalyst through which I can harness my sense
of place and identity. It
is an appropriate technical way of dealing with memory and loss,
using the mark as an increment of retrieval and its erasure as a
metaphor of loss.
The
Crossing
Over
drawing was exhibited at the
National Gallery of Zimbabwe, as a part the 2009 Harare International
Festival of Arts. Much like my participation in The
Border Crossing Project,
this demonstrates my interest in
the important role that art can play in retrieving and transforming
ideas and memories that cross borders and cultures. My
intention
in this to create links and build relationships between different
countries and cultures, despite what is said in the media.
Part
of the content of this drawing is the deliberate use of fragile and
temporary materials such as the large unprotected sheet of paper
pinned to the wall. The fragility of the medium of this work
expresses its stark subject matter.
The
Collaboration
I
worked together with Nina Rupena and Patricia Wozniak; we come from
diverse cultures, yet our work has been shaped by the fact that we
are all living in Australia because of the conflict in our home
countries. I came from Zimbabwe, Nina from Bosnia and Patricia’s
recalls her grandmother’s stories of her displacement from Poland
after the war. The central themes that we share in our work is;
conflict,
displacement, fragility, memory
and
post-memory.
An important factor we discussed was whether cultural diversity was
the source of peace (and collaboration) or the root of conflict. In
this we felt that it was vital that our collaboration be one of
negotiating and not negating our work and our histories,
because there is no single essence, no single history.
What
I consider an important aspect for The
Border Crossing Project,
is that it can open up a dialogue in which the artists and viewers
can consider their own positions on these proposals.
Meaning
through making:
The
deliberate use of fragile and temporary materials is an important
aspect of our collaboration.
The materials; collaged paper, charcoal, pastel, xerox transfers,
lace for stencils, spray paint, printing ink and muslin
Text by Lauryn Arnott
The Earth's waters are both boundaries and pathways for peoples, objects and ideas.
Fumio Nanjo