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Joan RossWhen the last flowers are picked, 2021hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper40.5 x 60 cm / 54 x 73 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Joan RossLand of the broken hearted, 2021hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper71 x 94 cm / 85 x 106 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Joan Ross, Land of the giants, 2021Click for more info.
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If only Joan Ross, with her enduring wisdom and wit, had written this history in the first place. – Daniel Mudie Cunningham
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Joan Ross, The Lake of Sadness, 2021Click for more info.
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Joan RossHouston, we have a problem, 2021hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper99 x 79 cm / 111 x 91 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Joan RossLearning to play their games, 2021hand-coloured pigment print on rag paper72.5 x 104 cm / 79.5 x 111 x 4 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Unique works.
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Joan RossMy own piece of paradise, 2021acrylic & ink on card111.5 x 85 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Joan Ross, title tbc, 2021Click for more info.
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Joan RossHow will he find his way back home?, 2021acrylic & ink on card111.5 x 85 cm (framed)$ 9,900.00Click for more info.
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Joan RossYou are my rock, 2021hand-spun Barbie hair, acrylic & ink on card111.5 x 85 cm (framed)Click for more info.
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Houston, We Have a Problem.
Art Collector Magazine, by Daniel Mudie Cunningham“The headless birds are about everything at once – about killing what you love.” Images of decapitated birds haunt Joan Ross’s recent work. As part of I Like to Name Everything After Myself – her November exhibition at the newly established N.Smith Gallery in Sydney – a bird in one image reaches for a microphone in a tree, presumably chirping the work’s caption: ‘Houston We Have a Problem’. Belying the humour of the sentiment, Ross is pointing out where political priorities lie; how we will spend millions going to space while we let millions starve and perish. It’s time to stop and listen to what is being killed: “nature is trying to talk – if we continue this way, we won’t have any birds left,” Ross remarks.
Working across drawing, painting, installation, photography, sculpture and video, Ross’s practice has consistently critiqued how colonial thinking and its damage especially to Indigenous people, plants and animals has seeped into every pore of late capitalism’s vociferous desire for greed and accumulation. Originally from Scotland and practicing as an artist in Australia since the late 1980s, Ross contemporises imagery of the past with witty references to complex contemporary understandings of race, class and gender within a postcolonial frame. With equal smatterings of absurdism and melancholy, her work is characterised by its handmade aesthetic, collaged elements, and recurring use of fluorescent yellow paint as a visual metaphor of encroachment and control.
Sought after and highly collectable, many of her works are housed in public and private collections including the National Gallery of Australia, Art Gallery of NSW and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. The colonial impulse to collect as a form of capture and classification is a key theme driving her work. A bowerbird herself, Ross’s practice is formed by materials gathered as an outcome of her own personal love/hate relationship to collecting.
“Often people start collecting things and before they know they are hungry for it,” she observes. This internal contradiction stemming from the desire to collect and the damage it can sustain is central to the conversation her work sparks. The damaging effect of collecting in institutional contexts is of particular concern given the systemic racism embedded in museum discourses from colonial times.
As part of the National Gallery of Australia’s Know My Name project, Ross was commissioned to create a projection for the gallery’s façade. In response to the NGA’s collection, her animation Collectors Paradise interrogated the entrenched colonial views that still inform collecting practices today. Gently subversive, Ross collapses the museum and liberates not just its imprisoned contents but an entire way of thinking. With Collectors Paradise Ross produced “a critique of the museum on the museum”, to paraphrase what gallery director Nick Mitzevich said to Ross when the work was unveiled in February 2021.
Winning the Art Gallery of NSW’s Sulman Prize in 2017 with the painting Oh history, you lied to me, Ross is consistently challenging the dominant narratives of history. Questioning who writes it, what is written in and what gets left out, Ross rewrites the narrative through her own fictions, acknowledging her own complicity in the process: “I see myself as part of the problem – we are all part of the problem.” Titling her new exhibition after the narcissisms of colonial control – I like to name everything after myself – Ross critiques known history by obliterating existing tropes with her own unique and recognisable hand. If only Joan Ross, with her enduring wisdom and wit, had written this history in the first place.