A highly textured surface of the embedded history and stories of the place it was peeled from.
Signed on the back.
This artwork comes with an external frame
This piece is part of the Mentalism series and the latest iteration of the goal of my Peelings: to highlight the beauty of outsiders, both people and places, that don’t meet traditional societal standards and expectations. Peeled from Sydney’s Gladesville Mental Hospital, formerly known as ‘Tarban Creek Lunatic Asylum’.
Mentalism draws its name, in part, from the site’s rich history of mental health. As Sydney’s first so-called ‘Lunatic Asylum’ from the 1830s, the site witnessed misunderstanding and taboo in relation to mental illness, as ‘patients’ sent to the institution were discarded and hidden away, as a source of shame
Mentalism also draws inspiration from the psychological theory of the same name, which sees physical and psychological phenomena as explicable only through the vessel of a perceptive, interpretive (and therefore creative) mind. This idea pervades my work, as I relish the diverse narratives that audiences read into my works. In this way, audiences’ perceptions and interpretations help to create the work. In a nod to the physical, the works are named after the coordinates from which they were peeled. The process of my Peeling method is performative, in that the works are the evidence of artistic interventions in space, and the coordinates catalogue that space.