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HHH #1 by Fiona Foley (2004)
HHH #1 by Fiona Foley (2004)
16 February 2010

Race relations, female sexuality and the history of opium in Queensland are among the issues tackled head on by the Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum's latest exhibition.

opens on February 19 and is the first survey of one of Australia's most prominent contemporary Indigenous artists.

One of the founding members of Boomalli Aboriginal Artists' Co-operative in 1987, Ms Foley has produced major public artworks, sculpture, photographs, artist prints, paintings and installations that have attracted national attention and respect.

"Fiona Foley is a Brisbane-based artist who is well known for the tough stance she takes on Indigenous history, but in her art she takes the phrase 'less is more' to heart, sometimes adding a sharp edge of humour," Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum Director Nick Mitzevich said.

The exhibition is presented in partnership with the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney (MCA), and tracks the artist's work over the past 15 years.

The survey coincides with Ms Foley's recent completion of major public art commissions in Mackay and at the State Library of Queensland, the latter referring to the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act of 1897.

"What I am trying to talk about is a notion of truth," Ms Foley said.

"I suppose my reputation has preceded me, because when I see something that doesn't sit well, I always question it."

Ms Foley is of the Wondunna clan of the Badtjala people from the Hervey Bay region, with much of her work motivated by the systematic dispossession of Indigenous people in Queensland at the turn of the twentieth century.

Key photographic suites include Native Blood and Badtjala Woman (1994), which feature the artist restaging the poses and attire associated with nineteenth century ethnographic photography, and a recent work inspired in part by the 2005 Cronulla race riots, Nulla 4 eva (2009).

"Foley's HHH series, for instance, presents a confronting inversion of the KKK (Ku Klux Klan) and was made when the artist was in New York in 2004," Mr Mitzevich said.

"The photographs depict African-Americans glaring at the camera, each cloaked in a black hood emblazoned with the initials HHH – Hedonistic Honky Haters – their gowns made of wonderfully colourful Dutch-wax cloth that celebrates their African heritage."

Her recent film Bliss (2006) also features as does the photographic suite Wild Times Call (2001), created with the Seminole community in Florida, which is ambitiously installed within a sea of corn at the Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum.

Fiona Foley: Forbidden also includes the artist's significant installation Land Deal (1995) from the collection of the National Gallery of Australia.

Land Deal comprises a large spiral of flour upon the gallery floor and related objects which refer to John Batman's "exchange" of items to the Wurundjeri people of Victoria in 1835 in return for the land upon which the city of Melbourne now stands.

The exhibition proved popular at the MCA over summer, with more than 70,000 visitors. Fiona Foley: Forbidden is open free to the public, seven days a week, until May 2.

This project has received financial assistance from the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland.

Media: Nick Mitzevich (0434 361 383, 07 3365 3046, n.mitzevich@uq.edu.au) or Cameron Pegg at Õ¬Äе¼º½ Communications (07 3365 2049, c.pegg@uq.edu.au)

** High resolution images are available for download