BENNETT 2024.147
By Grace Jeremy
'Something Borrowed' June 2025
Gordon Bennett’s Home Décor (De Stijl + Preston) Get Down and Boogie appropriates from the work of two leading modernist artists: Australian Margaret Preston and Dutch ‘De Stijl’ artist Piet Mondrian. Bennett creates a pattern with the large human footprints in Preston’s c.1957 ‘Australian legend’ print series – an image she took from rock carvings in the Sydney area, which she saw during excursions with the Anthropological Society of New South Wales.
Preston’s pursuit of a purely ‘Australian’ art also saw her using racial stereotypes when depicting First Nations peoples. Bennett references this by reproducing a figure from her print Australian legend, number 4: Kangaroo dance and pointing the bone c.1957 (Art Gallery of New South Wales). Bennett’s figure sits against a background reminiscent of Mondrian’s famous grid paintings, which were inspired by New York City’s streets and the boogie-woogie music that originated in African American blues. Bennett’s pairing of Preston and Mondrian highlights how both artists drew from other cultures and influenced popular aesthetics.
Connected objects
Metadata, copyright and sharing information
About this story
- Subject