Exhibition

Isle of Refuge
Opening: 5.30-7.30pm Thursday 12 June by David Bitel, President, Refugee 
Council of Australia

Exhibition Talk: 1.00pm Thursday 12 June - Ivan Dougherty Gallery

12 June - 19 July

IVAN DOUGHERTY GALLERY

Isle of Refuge highlights the plight of asylum seekers in detention 
centres in Australia and the South Pacific.

Isle features artworks by 13 prominent Australian visual artists united 
in their opposition to the recent treatment of refugees by the 
Australian government. Through painting, installation, sculpture and 
video, the artists have engaged with issues including: the conditions 
inside the detention centres, the children overboard affair, the wars in 
Afghanistan and Iraq, their own experiences of refugeehood, and the 
history of former refugee arrivals who now form an integral part of the 
Australian community.

Many of the artists came to Australia as a result of war and political 
or racial persecution. Chinese-Vietnamese artist My Le Thi, who is both 
one of the curators and an exhibitor in Isle, has been visiting the 
Villawood Detention Centre for some months now, where she has been 
encouraging detainees to work through their trauma by creating artworks 
for the exhibition.

George Gittoes, painter and maker of the documentary "Tales from a 
Suitcase" (screened on SBS TV), will exhibit works he produced as a 
result of his experiences in pre and post-war Afghanistan. These 
confronting images give us a powerful sense of some of the conditions 
Afghan refugees have fled, and those to which they fear to return.

Indigenous Australian painter Gordon Bennett's take on these issues is 
slightly different. He says his overpowering feeling of empathy with the 
detained refugees comes from the fact that Aboriginal people have a deep 
historical understanding of the reality of imprisonment - both in the 
physical sense of internment but also in the psychological sense of 
being excluded, reviled and isolated.

Meanwhile, Reg Mombassa (Chris O'Doherty) takes a much more satirical 
perspective on the situation through works such as his "Australian Jesus 
Welcomes the Boat People", as well as his representation of himself as a 
nerdy, thick-accented, gumboot-wearing refugee from New Zealand to 
Australia.

What emerges most strongly from the show is a sense of how Australia has 
been an invaluable isle of refuge for many of the exhibitors, and the 
determination of all that it should continue to offer refuge to those in 
need now and in the future.

Artists: Gordon Bennett, George Gittoes, Tim Johnson + Karma Phuntsok, 
Chris O'Doherty aka Reg Mombassa, Sue Saxon + Anne Zahalka, Laurens Tan, 
My Le Thi, Albertina Viegas, Savanhdary Vongpoothorn, Guan Wei, Mahmoud 
Yekta

Curators: Ashley Carruthers, Rilka Oakley and My Le Thi

For further information, please contact Rilka Oakley at Ivan Dougherty 
Gallery

TEL: 9385 0726 [EMAIL PROTECTED] cnr Albion Ave & Selwyn St Paddington NSW

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