Saturday, August 10, 2024

SPOONING BECOMES AN ART FORM

Our Shipping Reporter  is a stirrer, especially of  unusual souvenir teaspoons, some  off  long  gone  passenger ships  . This  blog   recently ran a  post  about his  major  discovery  in a Townsville market   of  a  battered  teaspoon , above,  which  featured  former  Australian Prime Minister ,  Harold Holt , who disappeared   while   swimming    off   Cheviot  Beach, Victoria , in  1967, a memorial service for him attended by world leaders. 

Our waterfront  scavenger  was  delighted to  read that  as part of this month's Pop Up  North Queensland (PUNQ) Art  Festival ,the Tyto Regional Art Gallery, Ingham , has a  special display , Stirring  Histories, a commissioned  teaspoon  installation  by  artist  Alison  McDonald.   

Her entry in the PUNQ  handbook guide   features   a  souvenir spoon . 

McDonald is described as  an artist whose 20-year practice  resolves  around the intersection of sculpture ,consumer culture and environmental awareness ,ranging from microscopic jewellery to monumental sculptures .

Continuing, it says she is motivated by the evolving significance of objects  as they traverse through  time and  ownership , and is  fascinated   by  the historical function of items , particularly  in imagining  how  their previous owners  may have  used  the objects  and  the  stories  they  carry . 

Stirring Histories is  a site specific  and kinetic artwork taking audiences  on a journey through  layered  narratives of  North Queensland's  sugar cane industry, through recognisable  and kitsch implements  that serve as a conduit  to history, the commemoratve spoon .

It interrogates the essence  of  colonial exploration and reflects on Australiana , where remnants of a bygone era  that once commemorated  and paid homage , now  overflow , found in op shops and  scrapmetal  heaps.