How Does Remember Us Influence Australian Culture

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An artist’s perspective on the world and their culture is expressed and reflected through their art by incorporating their values, beliefs and sense of self. In Australia, three adept artists use their refined creations to echo the societal, environmental, and political issues our country’s communities face. Black Douglas’s artworks Moby Dickens (2022) and Hurt By See (N.D.) reflect his culture and the world through themes such as colonialism, natural disasters, and the representation of other Aboriginal artists in his artworks. Installations like Remember Me (2022) and Remember Us (2023) by Reko Rennie emulate his perception and attitude toward our world by acknowledging the history of our country and the struggle that Aboriginal people face …show more content…

Remember Us represents the discrimination and abuse that Aboriginal Australians face from the Australian government, especially the police. Rennie explores the perspectives of those Aboriginals who lost their lives to our nation’s corrupt and prejudiced policing system. Rennie uses the marble surface and the sharp, red writing displaced in Remember Us to address this issue worldwide. The marble and the inscriptions reference Ancient Rome, which can be considered a recycling of Eurocentric mediums. This way, Rennie has created an installation that addresses this national issue of policing abuse towards Aboriginal Australians in a wider, broader international world. As Rennie states, “. This is a national and international travesty of justice. Words fail to address violations of human rights. Numbers speak volumes.” Rennie is addressing the overt racism, misunderstanding and prejudice that comes from our governing bodies and police, and he is signifying the gravity of this issue and the absurdity of how our people in power abuse their position to discriminate and create a systematic racial bias towards Aboriginal Australians. Statistics state that Indigenous children are 24 times more likely to be locked up in a juvenile detention centre, and from those 74% are more likely to end up in prisons than be …show more content…

Their works reflect their ideals and serve as tools to convey issues of injustice, race, colonialism, natural disasters and cultural stereotypes. For these artists, art reflects their Aboriginal culture and a world which has yet to grow, learn and prosper in contemporary art, pop art, and the broader spectrum of Aboriginal art. Their art addresses national and local struggles while also highlighting universal issues. Through their works, each artist explores cultural perspectives, histories and experiences. From these artists we now know that art is not just a reflection of the artist’s culture and the world; it is a mirror that depicts a world that changes by the minute through an artist’s eyes and a culture that evolves but never truly

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