Time Out (Sydney)

OK Democracy, We Need to Talk

Ten leading artists are getting political in this exhibition, asking the most urgent questions in the world. By Ben Neutze

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IT’S NOT EVERY art gallery that consults ABC election analyst Antony Green’s prediction­s when setting the opening of an exhibition. But Campbellto­wn Arts Centre’s OK Democracy,

We Need to Talk is all about our democratic process. The team took Green’s prediction­s of three dates when the election might fall and scheduled their opening for the middle weekend, May 18 and 19. Luckily for them, that was the weekend prime minister Scott Morrison picked. The exhibition is made up of all new artworks about how we vote, receive informatio­n and make our voices heard. “There’s a lot of talk about capitalism, about journalism, about protest,” Campbellto­wn Arts Centre director Michael Dagostino says. “All these big conversati­ons are happening in the public at the moment. As artists are part of communitie­s, they’re having those same conversati­ons.”

John and Yoko’s message returns

This year marks the 50th anniversar­y of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s famous poster declaring “War is over!” in large black text with the qualifier “if you want it” in a much smaller font below. For Sydney artist Deborah Kelly, that poster – a protest against the Vietnam War – is an important symbol of a time when artists made a significan­t contributi­on to an urgent social movement. She says nothing could be more urgent in 2019 than climate change, which is why she has repurposed the poster as a protest against coal, changing the message to “Coal is over!”

“To be honest, I wish I could’ve thought of something more incredible,” Kelly says. “We are betrayed by parties who literally belong to fossil fuel interests, and what do we fucking do? A poster is a bit pissweak, but that’s just a prelude to lying down in front of a bulldozer, or whatever we will be called upon to do.” There are 2,000 copies of the poster printed on high quality recycled paper in carbon ink for visitors to take home, as well as more elaborate versions displayed in the gallery. Kelly is hoping to borrow some of John and Yoko’s optimism to inspire action against the enormous pressures in favour of coal. But she sees her democratic responsibi­lity as being no different to anybody else’s. “Artists don’t live on some other planet,” she says. “If only we had magical powers and could restore genuine, participat­ory democracy.”

Clothes maketh the leader

The fashion choices our politician­s make aren’t generally front of mind when we think about the effectiven­ess of our democracy, but Pakistani-born artist Abdullah MI Syed has some serious objections. “Today, the fashion when it comes to politician­s is just negligible,” he says. “Everybody wears the blue suit, and there’s only two tie options – red and blue – and it’s completely undemocrat­ic

in my opinion.” Syed’s work for the exhibition explores how democracy is performed, with four jackets created out of the legal tender of four different countries: Pakistan, USA, China and Australia. The styles have all been worn by the leaders of these nations at some point and range from Chairman Mao’s suit, buttoned to the very top, to the Driza-Bone jackets which Australia chose for the 2007 APEC summit in Sydney. There are legal issues Syed needs to be aware of: the penalty for defacing Australian currency is up to two years in prison. That means there’s to be no stitching or gluing of the five-dollar notes used in the Driza-Bone. “Legally I can’t do anything with the money, so the entire jacket is being encased in plastic,” he says.

Speaking truth to power

Peter Greste is no stranger to the sort of political pressure that can be placed on journalist­s, having spent 400 days in an Egyptian prison for his reporting. So it makes sense that Sydney-based artist Eugenia Raskopoulo­s would consult the Australian journalist in her work about the struggle that journalist­s have in speaking truth to power. “I started to discuss with him my ideas,” she says. “I’d been on the right research track, and he gave me more informatio­n to look at. He was extremely generous and supportive.” The resulting work features the names of 54 journalist­s who were killed in 2018, from countries including Afghanista­n, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Israel. They cascade down a wall in the gallery – like a “wall of tears” – printed in reflective mirrored vinyl. Raskopoulo­s is under no illusions that her work will make a significan­t difference to the way the media operates and the democratic process unfolds, but is giving visitors an experience that will allow them to question their place within a particular system. “I think artists like to question,” she says. “I also think you want to touch people… We sit in our loungeroom with a cup of tea and a Tim Tam, watching the horrors of the world unfold. It’s not until something slaps you in the face that you start to question the kind of world you’re in.”

Politics on the edge

The exhibition, which also features work by Richard Bell, Louisa Bufardeci, Kuba Dorabialsk­i, Eugenia Lim, Make or Break, Sarah Rodigari and Lara Thoms, is packed full of explicitly political statements, but Dagostino says it’s as much about creating an emotive response in its audience as it is engaging them politicall­y. “It’s something artists can do that a statistica­l report on climate change can’t do,” he says. It’s also no coincidenc­e that the exhibition is taking place in the southweste­rn suburbs of Sydney, a region once considered make-or-break territory for federal elections. With an abundance of new artworks, the exhibition sits right at the core of what Campbellto­wn Arts Centre does, pushing forward from the edge of the city and tackling urgent questions. Dagostino says, “If we were to look at this exhibition in 20 years time, issues of the gig economy, issues of climate change, which are really poignant now, are reflected. I think it’s a really strong snapshot of what’s happening in 2019.” àCampbellt­own Arts Centre, 1 Art Gallery Rd, Campbellto­wn 2560. 02 4645 4100. c-a-c.com.au. Daily 10am-4pm. Free. Until Jul 31.

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