Warraba Weatherall: To know and possess
By Katina Davidson
Artlines | 1-2022 | December 2022
Editor: Stephanie Kennard
Indigenous Australian objects and remains were removed from their resting places and collected by museums throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In a recently acquired work, which adopts the commemorative trope of the bronze plaque, Kamilaroi artist Warraba Weatherall highlights this history, and the debate that continues around repatriation, for contemporary audiences, writes Katina Davidson.
In To know and possess 2021, Warraba Weatherall investigates museological collections that hold Indigenous human remains and cultural materials from the artist’s Country and surrounds. It records ten objects held in national collections, including a grindstone, a modified tree, pigment, a stone axe, a club, a boomerang, a shield, and skulls and bone fragments belonging to three ancestors. Weatherall has chosen to cast the original museum records of these objects as individual bronze memorials. Spanning 1919 to 1979, the museum‑transcribed information includes details of the person who collected the item, where they collected it from, and the year the item entered the institutional collection. What becomes apparent is the significance of what has been omitted: including the maker, also missing are who the objects belonged to and the circumstances of the material’s removal from Country. However, one shield’s entry includes the horrific nature in which it was collected: ‘left by Aborigines after Myall Creek massacre — notice shot holes’.
The removal of Indigenous Australian objects and human remains was a well-known occurrence throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The breadth of the collection of Indigenous cultural property, as well as advocacy for their timely repatriation to communities across the country, has been an area of debate and research for many decades. Weatherall’s work critiques the integrity of collecting institutions that seek to ‘protect’ cultural objects by keeping them in secure environments. Institutional acts of ‘safekeeping’ separate these objects from descendants and their intended uses. The artist points out that removing these objects from their makers, communities and descendants renders them scientific curiosities and colonial trophies.
Bronze monuments memorialise history’s victors: colonists, legends and figureheads of control. First Nations and culturally diverse artists and activists across the world have recently questioned the continued relevance of these figureheads and the counternarratives they represent, including the genocide of the people whose lands they claimed as their own. This movement has signalled the emergence of the ‘counter-monument’. Intimately sized, the bronze plaques of To know and possess allude to public memorials, which are often seen as reminders of those who have died or of tragic events. By highlighting the museological practices of removal, Weatherall’s work allows the general public to understand the dehumanising aspect of categorising Indigenous cultural objects and the remains of our ancestors, and the significance of calls for repatriation.
Katina Davidson is Curator, Indigenous Australian Art, QAGOMA.
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To know and possess 2021
- WEATHERALL, Warraba - Creator
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