A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach

Many different discourses about the “new” Aboriginal art forms, especially Acrylic Paintings of the Central Desert, have been constructed during the last 30 years. These constructions have attempted to explain the role, the meaning and the reception of that art form, both in a local arena (concernin...

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Main Author: Roser Bosch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat de Barcelona 2009-07-01
Series:Coolabah
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistes.ub.edu/index.php/coolabah/article/view/15751/18864
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spelling doaj-e4f3a429b019454b9f43a2f6aaf3b2c02020-11-24T23:33:43ZengUniversitat de BarcelonaCoolabah1988-59462009-07-01324325110.1344/co2009/.3.243-251A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approachRoser Bosch0 University Pompeu FabraMany different discourses about the “new” Aboriginal art forms, especially Acrylic Paintings of the Central Desert, have been constructed during the last 30 years. These constructions have attempted to explain the role, the meaning and the reception of that art form, both in a local arena (concerning the communities in which it is produced) and in an (inter)national one. Such explanatory discourses are used to exceed the specific object of study – the works of acrylic on canvas – becoming general and descriptive views of the whole art-production of Aboriginal society, as well as of their culture and their identity. Moreover, these constructions came from two different fields that traditionally – from the end of 19th century and the beginning of the 20th onwards – have competed for the imposition and hegemony of their views: one related to the artistic sphere (mainly art criticism) and the other related to anthropological and ethnological studies. This article suggests an approach to the Acrylic Paintings of the Central Desert as an element of identity, reasserting as well as a place for Aboriginal cross-cultural understanding. From a critical point of view, many core topics -tropos- from classical discourses about Acrylic Painting -such as the Dreaming, the land, aesthetics, the role of socialization and the power of the representational system of geometric forms- will be discussed. In order to achieve the former, the mutually excluding polarization between Art and Anthropology has been avoided thus bringing together both perspectives. Furthermore, the aim is to recover the too-long-forgotten voices of the artists involved by disregarding the mainstream colonial discourse.http://revistes.ub.edu/index.php/coolabah/article/view/15751/18864aboriginal acrylic paintingpost-colonial aboriginal identity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roser Bosch
spellingShingle Roser Bosch
A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
Coolabah
aboriginal acrylic painting
post-colonial aboriginal identity
author_facet Roser Bosch
author_sort Roser Bosch
title A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
title_short A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
title_full A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
title_fullStr A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
title_full_unstemmed A way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the Central Desert. A critical approach
title_sort way of reasserting and sharing identity: acrylic paintings of the central desert. a critical approach
publisher Universitat de Barcelona
series Coolabah
issn 1988-5946
publishDate 2009-07-01
description Many different discourses about the “new” Aboriginal art forms, especially Acrylic Paintings of the Central Desert, have been constructed during the last 30 years. These constructions have attempted to explain the role, the meaning and the reception of that art form, both in a local arena (concerning the communities in which it is produced) and in an (inter)national one. Such explanatory discourses are used to exceed the specific object of study – the works of acrylic on canvas – becoming general and descriptive views of the whole art-production of Aboriginal society, as well as of their culture and their identity. Moreover, these constructions came from two different fields that traditionally – from the end of 19th century and the beginning of the 20th onwards – have competed for the imposition and hegemony of their views: one related to the artistic sphere (mainly art criticism) and the other related to anthropological and ethnological studies. This article suggests an approach to the Acrylic Paintings of the Central Desert as an element of identity, reasserting as well as a place for Aboriginal cross-cultural understanding. From a critical point of view, many core topics -tropos- from classical discourses about Acrylic Painting -such as the Dreaming, the land, aesthetics, the role of socialization and the power of the representational system of geometric forms- will be discussed. In order to achieve the former, the mutually excluding polarization between Art and Anthropology has been avoided thus bringing together both perspectives. Furthermore, the aim is to recover the too-long-forgotten voices of the artists involved by disregarding the mainstream colonial discourse.
topic aboriginal acrylic painting
post-colonial aboriginal identity
url http://revistes.ub.edu/index.php/coolabah/article/view/15751/18864
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