ELLE (Australia)

THE ART OF THE MATTER

WHY WE NEED ART TO SPEAK FOR US – AND TO US – MORE THAN EVER

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Activist art is having a moment – and we can’t get enough.

in 2011, femme fatale Lana Del Rey crooned: “I heard that you like the bad girls, honey/is that true?” Who could have predicted that by the end of the decade, she would have released one of the most moving commentari­es on the lack of gun control in the US? “Pulled over to watch the children in the park/ We used to only worry for them after dark”, she sings in “Looking For America”.

In an interview with The New York Times about the track, Del Rey noted that under the Obama administra­tion, “We could focus on the arts and it was a time of reprieve, and we didn’t have to talk about certain things.” As for the Trump era, she said: “If there wasn’t a time for protest music [before], there absolutely is now.”

Similarly, Taylor Swift has shifted focus from boyfriends and break-ups to principles and feminism. The Tennessee artist was once notoriousl­y quiet when it came to politics, but in the Netflix documentar­y Miss Americana, we see her battling between what’s expected of her as America’s country-pop sweetheart and what she stands for personally. Her protest single “Miss Americana And The Heartbreak Prince”, for example, not-sosubtly conceals politics under a metaphor of high-school drama.

A new age of the protest song beckons, as we’ve seen through artists such as Billie Eilish, Tones And I and Childish Gambino. More and more, other musicians are aligning themselves politicall­y, as The Strokes, Bon Iver and Vampire Weekend did recently in support of Bernie Sanders’ bid to be the US Democratic Presidenti­al candidate.

Protest and the arts have forever had a hand in forging progressiv­e dialogue. And today, activist art is not only contained to traditiona­l channels, as it becomes an increasing­ly necessary form of communicat­ing our collective disillusio­nment. Think of the cleverly considered homemade signs wielded at climate marches, the well-crafted memes that nail our eco-anxieties and, perhaps most importantl­y, how the arts community has pulled together in support of drought and bushfire victims. It’s also evident on the street with Bushfire Brandalism – the guerilla collective of 41 artists who took to our capital cities to replace bus shelter ads with politicall­y charged posters protesting inaction on climate change.

“Art is a tool I use to talk to people about ideas, politics and the ethics of being in the world today,” says artist Connie Anthes. One half of Sydney-based duo Make Or Break, she and Rebecca Gallo often create work that centres around social and political issues. They will present a citizen-led news project at Next Wave Festival in May. “[Art] helps people everywhere to discuss complex issues that may otherwise feel too uncomforta­ble, challengin­g, radical or revolution­ary,” says Anthes. “It can be a useful way to build empathy or understand­ing.”

In light of the current climate, creatives, curators and major institutio­ns are upping the diversity and activism-centric art in their programs. Paul Kelly recently condemned the government’s stance on climate change in his song “Sleep, Australia, Sleep”. He will appear in conversati­on with activist and punk-poet Patti Smith as part of the Sydney Writers’ Festival on April 8; while the 22nd Biennale Of Sydney continues to project the voices of First Nations artists (on until June 8). The National Gallery Of Victoria’s

Top Arts 2020 exhibition (on until July 12) features plenty of activism-charged art by Year 12 students, and the gallery will also display the most thought-provoking works in its collection in an exhibition called

We Change The World (running from May this year until April 2021). And let’s not forget that some of the most affecting works of the past few months have emerged from photograph­ers on the ground in fire-ravaged areas. This could make events such as the National

Geographic Travel Photo Contest, Head On Photo Festival (May 1-17) and the Australian Photograph­y Awards in April the next big art prizes to watch.

Then there’s the wildly regrammabl­e Instagram account @dudewithsi­gn, which shows Seth (the dude) holding up protest signs such as “Stop replying all to company-wide emails” and “Put more chips in the bag”. Perhaps it’s his bio that best sums up the mood of our times: “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for anything.”

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from left: An installati­on by Make Or Break; a Bushfire Brandalism poster; Ben Quilty’s “High Tide Mark” at the NGV
Clockwise from left: An installati­on by Make Or Break; a Bushfire Brandalism poster; Ben Quilty’s “High Tide Mark” at the NGV
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