Project Work (2019 - 2021)

Do Brumbies

 Dream in  

         Red?

Do Brumbies Dream in Red is a story of ecological collapse told through the 2019-2020 Australian bushfire season and the Snowy Mountain brumby, an Australian feral wild-roaming horse

Brumbies are now increasingly seen as destructive force on the Australian environment. Their hooves destroy delicate ecosystems and their faeces contaminate critical water systems, yet they are also recognised by some as a part of Australia’s cultural identity. Fire’s role too has shifted. From a tool and a harbinger of safety to something beyond our our control and destructive. As human influence over the environment intensified, summers become hotter, droughts last for longer and species once seen as useful become invasive.

There are no images of fire included in this project as this work is not about the momentary drama of flames, but about cyclical lockstep and what is left in wake. The title itself is a proposition; Horses render the world in blues and greens, asking if they dream in red is an invitation to re-imagine the world as it appeared while suffused in the red glow of the bushfires.

The research is underpinned by the work of English professor Timothy Morton and his theories on ‘ecological awareness’ in Dark Ecology (2016), which examine the intersection of places, scales and nonhuman interrelations. Running parallel to these ideas are those of American professor Donna Haraway’s most recent book, Staying with the Trouble (2016). Her concept of the ‘Chthulucene’ strives to capture a future in which all things in the world are connected, coexist and, in many cases, ‘collaborate’, and through this, we learn to ‘live and die well together’. 

The visual outcomes are intertwined and are driven by a series of colour film photographs and moving images made in creative collaboration with cinematographer Angus Scott and audio engineer Sean Kenihan. The series was exhibited in February 2021 at Meat Market Stables (North Melbourne) as part of the PHOTO 2021 festival. Along with the exhibition, the project culminates in a 120 page, 33 x 26cm large-format photo book (edition of 1000). The black artboard cover features a tipped on graphic artist by Katherina Rodrigues and comes with a concertina text insert featuring a poem by Dr Judith

Presented as an immersive experience this collaborative project utilises large-scale projection to place the audience within the Snowy Mountains and Victorian Alpine regions during the period of 2019 - 2020 referred to as the Black Summer.

Tom Goldner - Curation, Angus Scott - Moving Image, Sean Kenihan - Sound & Score, Judith Crispin Poetry, CJ Dobson Colourist (Moving Image)

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