Map: Bushtrip 2017, road to Mulumbu

$2,600.00

Created late 2022

Materials Incised paint on aluminium.

Size 162 x 95 cm (wxh)
Frame hanging supports on back, framed by Plastic Sandwich in Jolimont, Perth

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From the series Backtrack

The Kimberley wilderness is vastly different to my New Zealand homeland. The region’s isolation and idiosyncrasies made sharing experiences outside a small local network challenging. This body of work uses drawing to reflect, process and share fragments of my story as an arts worker in the West Kimberley. Rendering memories as a cathartic process, rather than drafting an accurate, archival record of an event or moment in time.

Mapping
‘Several years ago, during a time transition and burnout, I began to map my travel routines as a form of catharsis. The physical plotting of movement and repetition across time and space provided perspective and a pathway for reflective journaling.’
‘The first map I drew tracked the flight paths routinely travelled between the Kimberley and my home in Aotearoa New Zealand. Next, I retraced the bush trips I journeyed as an arts worker travelling with Wandjina Wunggurr peoples. Some bush trips are so significant they remain undrawn. The maps I have chosen to draw are connected to places already accessible to the public.’

About this drawing:
After ten hours of driving the Gibb River Road, we arrived at Mulumbu with enough light remaining to set up camp. This bush trip was a Back to Country camp connecting with Ngarinyin people from the east Kimberley. My role was to provide art supplies and engage youth in recording a story told by an elder. We recorded audio in the shade and video in the long grass along the ridge.