Over its history, the biennial also offered artists opportunities to show their work in non-traditional spaces, such as Cockatoo Island, Pier 2/3 in Walsh Bay, Barangaroo and places within The Rocks. My favorite was Cockatoo Island, a site with both colonial and industrial heritage that offered spaces filled with history, which sometimes overwhelmed the works, but, at other times, provided a scale that allowed and encouraged ambition.
Among works that challenged the history of the site:
Aleks Danko’s Cultural Meditations comes to my mind. It was part of the 17th Biennale of Sydney The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a Precarious Age (2010). I remember witnessing this work on Cockatoo Island: a series of Ukrainian embroidery that spoke to personal parental loss as well as an attempt at holding on to history through material making. I remember walking through the exhibition and feeling so overwhelmed by how much work surrounded me. I eventually found Aleks Danko’s work in a quiet cottage to be a balm that slowed time, and spoke of love, materiality, and holding on, while people and knowledge slipped away.
There’s also Nicholas Galanin’s work at the 22nd Biennale of Sydney. Shadow on the Land, an excavation and bush burial was an excavation of the shadow cast by the Captain Cook statue in Sydney’s Hyde Park. A work that required to be viewed from above and challenged perception as on the ground, the form of the work couldn’t be revealed. Using the language of archaeology to subvert expectations, Galanin’s work asked us to dig up the past to consider new possibilities for the future.
Gina Athena Ulysse’s An Equitable Human Assertion, Rasanblaj began as a performance that transformed into a sound installation, both haunting and haunted. Utilizing a site of colonial architecture ruin filled with voices of colonized bodies, the work was an effective way to consider the narratives of those who have disappeared from history but persist through language. This work reminded me of the importance of holding on to language, of how oral histories contain so much more than we give them credit for, and how both sharing and listening to the voice are equal acts of remembrance.
These sites and these relationships have become pivotal in creating histories that challenge perceptions of land ownership and who tells the stories. That land holds stories and that these stories can be revealed by the right storyteller.