Echoes of Invasions (Prickly Pear)
26 January — 20 February 2022
Sally Molloy
Echoes of Invasion (Prickly Pear) is part of an ongoing visual exploration of my personal situated-ness in relation to everyday and ongoing colonisations in contemporary so-called Australia. Drawing together everyday observations, art-historical or pop cultural references, allusions to the domestic, and hints of white Australian vernacular humour, I respond to colonisation as an everyday process perpetrated by everyday people living their everyday lives.
Echoes of Invasions was stimulated by the incidental presence of opuntia stricta (Prickly Pear) in my everyday life on unceded Jagera and Turrbal lands. Seemingly unremarkable in the garden of my child's kindergarten, this plant carries in its seductive spiky paddles, echoes of the original species introduced in 1788 for the purposes of cultivating dye for British Red Coats. In Echoes of Invasions, I borrow a reference to this uniform from The Landing of Captain Cook at Botany Bay (E. Phillips Fox, 1902) and butt it up against snippets of Margaret Flockton’s botanical illustration Opuntia (1911), an embroidered handkerchief, and a cartoon from The Sydney Mail (1923) called 'The Invasion of Australia’ featuring a prickly pear monster chasing a white family. I allow the Prickly Pear in my personal realm to lead me to these disparate yet interrelated references in a way that connects colonisations past to colonisations present, in a way that shrouds the colonial legacy in the context of my everyday life.
As in previous works, the way these figments refuse to coalesce on the surface of the painting evokes the unresolved nature of the colonising process. Here however, the canvas has been abandoned as a support for the painting in favour of a crude 'paper' panel made from reconstituted kitty litter, dog hair, lantana flowers, and string. In this way, materially as well as symbolically, the detritus of my everyday life on unceded Jagera and Turrbal lands becomes the foundation of my visual response to ongoing colonisation.
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Outer Space Window Gallery
2R-C, 420 Brunswick Street
Fortitude Valley Q 4006
(map here)
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Sally Molloy is an artist based in Brisbane/Meanjin, Queensland. Her practice is concerned with locating and critiquing the everyday forms of colonisation that she contributes to and benefits from. Molloy responds to her awareness of living white on unceded Indigenous lands utilising various processes such as collage, painting, installation, soft sculpture, sound work, and video. With her naive aesthetic and a tendency toward the playful, personal, makeshift, and crummy, Molloy questions the implied hierarchy of media and the value of what might be called a 'backyard critique'. Molloy has exhibited nationally and is a recent PhD graduate from the Queensland College of Art where she continues to teach as a sessional lecturer in the painting department.
Documentation by Louis Lim
This project has been assisted by the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland.