2016 Program pt 1

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Hydrowilderness


Hydrowilderness

Bryden Williams

Opening 04.05.16 6-8pm
Artist Talks 26.05.16 6-7pm

Hydro-Wilderness deals with the aesthetic and environmental implications of hydro-electric and water management infrastructures. Sydney based artist Bryden Williams questions the cultural and aesthetic integrities of both ecological and technological forces at play within the Australian environment through a new series of photographic, video and installation works centred around the infrastructural aspects of water management and hydro-electric facilities.

Various locations are interrogated through a documentarian photographic approach, featuring sites such as Sydney’s Warragamba catchment, the Snowy Mountains Hydro-electric Scheme and Victoria’s Kiewa Hydro-electric Scheme. The featured catchment areas are treated as site-specific studies of the natural and organic aesthetic attributes of water and the peripheral structures of containment – canals, dams and pipelines. Collectively, alongside video and installation elements, the work questions the integrities of both the functional and aesthetic properties of water-related systems. The hydro-dam becomes a site composed of elements in a compromised state – a ruptured natural space whereby concrete, steel and mechanical elements convert unaltered river flow into a managed commodity. Whilst each location retains a unique assembly of materials that allude by design to particular aspects of Australian engineering history, concrete, the building block of the dam, becomes a material pretense for Australia’s cultural identity.

Williams questions the potential of various man-made elements that are interacting with and manipulating our river systems whilst the exhibition represents a culmination of personal inquiries into water. The audience are encouraged to consider the aesthetic implications of local engineered spaces and to question the practicalities of water use.

About The Artist
Later Event: 1 June
Soft Ions