Tracing the Rupture

project description

Tracing the Rupture explores selfhood and the fractured contexts we experience throughout life. By observing and engaging with moments of upheaval and fractured spaces, we generate a new narrative that further informs our futures. Across a range of artistic practices, the exhibition follows dialogues that exist between the artist and the rupture, the individual and the context. Each artist examines turning points in which rupture has taken place. These potent junctures possess the ability to develop or solidify our identity, as a consequence of what we've lost or what has been taken from us. Whether a fractured personal narrative, collective rupture, or disruption to the landscape, the artists engage with these spaces from an intimate place of authority. By acknowledging junctures of turmoil and how experience informs the process of the artist, Tracing the Rupture explores how we repair and continue to rebuild our lives in the wake of rupture. A Blue Mountains City Art Gallery exhibition curated by Hayley Zena Poynton

project video

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project categories

ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF NGURRA

The City of the Blue Mountains is located within the Ngurra (Country) of the Dharug and Gundungurra peoples. MTNS MADE recognises that Dharug and Gundungurra Traditional Owners have a continuous and deep connection to their Country and that this is of great cultural significance to Aboriginal people, both locally and in the region. For Dharug and Gundungurra People, Ngurra takes in everything within the physical, cultural and spiritual landscape – landforms, waters, air, trees, rocks, plants, animals, foods, medicines, minerals, stories and special places. It includes cultural practice, kinship, knowledge, songs, stories and art, as well as spiritual beings, and people: past, present and future. Blue Mountains City Council pays respect to Elders past and present while recognising the strength, capacity and resilience of past and present Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Blue Mountains region.