Gallery 1
Unruly Edges
Ellen Dahl, Emma Pinsent, Eduardo Wolfe-Alegria
Roomsheet
Unruly Edges brings together the works of three seemingly disparate artists whose works are connected through notions of boundaries, edges and post-natural intersections. Emma Pinsent’s site-responsive works transform encounters with porosity within the intertidal zone, informed by situated fieldwork and walking within Arakwal beaches in the Northern Rivers NSW. Sculptural experiments engaged on and off-site, aim to reveal fraught entanglements between colonial legacies of extraction, property, ecology, weather and waste. Ellen Dahl explores the expanded field of the photographic medium to creatively engage with overlapping and ambiguous concepts like the Anthropocene, the edge, time and geological imaginations. Eduardo Wolfe-Alegria’s anthropomorphic sculptures and paintings merge human and non-human, imagined and real, to create bucolic fantasies underpinned by narratives of ecological dissonance.
In Unruly Edges, these artists have collaborated to create an imagined ecotone or contact zone, formed as the boundaries of their works dissolve and entangle, initiating new dialogues between their works in order to draw out previously unexplored or emergent ideas in their practices. The works are visually connected through a bluish light, casting the gallery space in a “strange iridescence” evoking connections to water, the subterranean and the geological as well as to “unnatural” colours of plastics, mining and other synthetic materials. By establishing a porous zone – where art practices, materials and conceptual ecological thinking blend, the artists reference Jeffery Jerome Cohen’s eco-theorethical concept of Prismatic Ecology. It argues that creating a green exclusivism (or focus on what we consider ‘precious’ or ‘pristine’ environments) ignores the aesthetic potency of nature’s polychromatic diversity, and in turn undermines its full potential to inform our cognitive, aesthetic and imaginative experiences. This tendency to lump ecologies together as ‘green’, Cohen argues creates limitations for aesthetic understanding of ecology beyond the nature/culture binary. Unruly Edges sets out to destabilise this binary, incorporating a polychromatic framework, arguing that an expanded and reimagined aesthetic approach is needed to contend with an increasingly complex and uncertain ecological future.