posted on 2019-03-12, 01:00authored byLisa Anne Slade
<p>In
the second decade of the nineteenth century, during the period of Lachlan
Macquarie’s governorship (1810 – 1821), a penal outpost in New South Wales
became an unexpected wellspring of curiosity. This thesis offers insights into
the specific material and conceptual forms of curiosity during this period
through an exploration of a selection of images and objects. These include the
Macquarie Collectors’ Chest, the Skottowe Manuscript, the Riley cabinet and
paintings by convict artist Joseph Lycett. Each of these colonial curiosities
reveals the rarely examined entanglements and collaborations between
colonisers, convicts and Aboriginal people and expose the duplicity of
nineteenth-century colonial life and identity in the antipodes. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>In
addition to examining this manifestation of colonial curiosity, one that is
bound to a specific time and place, this thesis traces the after-life of
colonial concepts of curiosity in contemporary art and exhibition making
through analyses of work by the Australian artists including Brook Andrew,
Julie Gough, Fiona Hall, Nicholas Folland and Joan Ross. This study
demonstrates that works of art can function as epistemological ‘boomerangs’,
travelling between early modern (and ancient) conceptions and misprisions, and
the contemporary. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Curiosity
is therefore considered not from the northern hemisphere, home to the great age
of curiosity, best expressed through the sixteenth and seventeenth century cabinets
of wonder and art known as <i>Wunderkammern</i> and <i>Kunstkammern</i>, but from
the south, where curiosity emerges with a distinctly antipodean voice. Case
studies of exhibitions, including those curated by the author, are critical to
this thesis. Through a veritable Wunderkammer of juxtapositions between works
of art, ideas and exhibitions, this thesis positions an austral curatorial
perspective, inviting us to see from the South.</p>