Rendering hands is a torture method in hell im sure of it...


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Rendering hands is a torture method in hell im sure of it...
THE KEEL by WILLIAM VERSACE from his current exhibition Directions Back Home, on show till 1 April 2023. ◾️ Catalogue via link in bio. The Keel, 2023, Plaster cast from shipwreck in Blackwood frame, 30cm H x 25.5cm W x 5.5cm D This series of plaster wall sculptures have been created using silicon cast moulds from the shipwreck SS Minmi, an old screw steamer, which set voyage from Melbourne in 1937 en route to Newcastle. On May 13, 1937 the ship crashed ashore in Kamay and since that day parts of the wreckage remain scattered around the Kamay coastline – corroding, oxidising and decaying the steel back into the elements it once was before it was forged into such an object. With minimal intervention William Versace paid particular interest in the large part of the wreck, still above water, that has been decaying back into the ocean over time. Framed in rich lustrous blackwood these unique achromatic works draw attention to the veins, crinkles, cracks and lines which are the result of almost 90 years of corrosion. What you see is a moment frozen in time – when the salt and the water and the bacteria became enmeshed with steel and iron and decay and created what it created. Artwork photos @deanliphotostudio #art #shipwreck #sculpture #wallsculpture #australianart #australiansculpture #kamay #botanybay #sydneygallery (at Redfern, New South Wales) https://www.instagram.com/p/CqUCbwFh4rP/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Voodoo Waters 2024
Shot on the Nikon FM2 with Nikkor AIS 50mm F1.4 Lens on 2021 LomoChrome
#voodoo #kamay #kamayationalpark #sydney #nsw #filmphotography #nikonfm2 #lomography #lomochrome #turqouise #ishootfilm #photography #filmphoto #indy_photolife #nikon #nikoncamera
A person in my shot!
Bare Island sits in Kamay (Botany Bay) and is linked to the La Perouse shore by this heritage listed bridge.
And not just a fisherman in the pic, finally some dawn clouds for Sydney.
"Hawak Kamay" Lyrics
“Hawak Kamay” Lyrics
“Hawak Kamay” Lyrics Read “Hawak Kamay” Lyrics & Enjoy.😊. For more Lyrics updates please subscribe.Thanks. Similar Lyrics .. Yeng Constantino Lyrics “Hawak Kamay” Minsan madarama mo kay bigat ng problema Minsan mahihirapan ka at masasabing “di ko makakaya” Tumingin ka lang sa langit Baka sakaling may masumpungan Di kaya ako’y tawagin Malalaman mong kahit kailan Hawak-kamay Di kita iiwan sa…
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1 Alison Page, Nik Lachacjzak, Shane Youngberry , The Eyes of the Land and the Sea (2020)
2 Theresa Ardler and Julie Squires Nawi (canoes) (2020)
3 Tupaia (c1724–1770) [Polynesian high priest and navigator who joined the Endeavour voyage in the Society Islands ]
Australian Aboriginal People in Bark Canoes April 1770 pencil and watercolour
A www.nla.gov.au Diary of Joseph Banks (28 April 1770)
By noon we were within the mouth of the inlet which appear’d to be very good. Under the South head of it were four small canoes; in each of these was one man who held in his hand a long pole with which he struck fish, venturing with his little imbarkation almost into the surf. These people seemd to be totaly engag’d in what they were about: the ship passd within a quarter of a mile of them and yet they scarce lifted their eyes from their employment.
read https://www.bl.uk/eblj/2005articles/pdf/article10.pdf Tupaia’s Sketchbook
B Alison Page
“...brings together different perspectives on our shared history – the bones of a whale and the ribs of a ship – and sits in the tidal zone between the ship and the shore where the identity of modern Australia lies. The first encounter between James Cook and the First Australians was a meeting of two very different knowledge systems, beliefs and cultures. The abstraction of the ribs of the HMB Endeavour and the bones of the Gweagal totem the whale, speaks to the different perspectives of those first encounters, providing a conjoined narrative of two very different world-views.”
C smh.com.au Dillon Komumberri, architect
"The devastating impact of colonisation, with its disruption to Aboriginal landscape, people and cultural practices, has over time created a collective amnesia regarding this history." Mr Kombumberri said generations of built-up cultural bias meant people were unable to see systems of managing the land that were right in front of them, such as the growing of native grasses and traditional fire burning."The thing about cultural amnesia is this idea that Country is still speaking, but we may not be able to hear her," he said.
The sculptures commemorate the first encounters between Aboriginal Australians and the crew of the HMB Endeavour, 250 years ago and represent the beginning of our shared history.