I SEE NOTHING! I KNOW NOTHING!

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Framing Options

A$360

Artwork Details

Medium Reproduction Print, Paper (Requires Framing)
Dimensions 83cm (W) x 60cm (H) x 1cm (D)
Review Stars 21,239 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
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Friday, Jun 12 - Sunday, Jun 14

Artwork Description

I see nothing! I hear nothing! I know nothing!" Sergeant Schultz Hogan's Heroes

This is not historical re-enactment but a fishing expedition.

From an Irish or Indian perspective, Winston Churchill, with his state sponsored terrorist group ‘the black an tans’ or the ‘Bengal famine’ could be viewed alongside the Nazi’s, without too much of a stretch, Winston was an unreserved racist with a shameless ability to dehumanise the ‘other’ a true british colonial champion.
Given Australia was a penal colony for its first eighty years, utterly oblivious to the genius of the farming and the true wealth of the country. i decided a true blue, fair dinkum, character and symbol of its creation and rise to wealth, would be a bumbling incompetent Nazi P.O.W camp sergeant in pop culture.

“Mobility scandalised Europeans. Their road obliged them to fence and guard, to stay put, to make hard work a virtue. This gave great advantages, including the numbers and technology to explain why a white Australian writes this book. It also led them to condemn people who reduced their material wants, sat yarning in daylight, and gave so much time to ceremony and ritual. These were preserves and pursuits of gentry. It did not seem right that Aborigines should be like that.”
― Bill Gammage, The Biggest Estate on Earth

Artist Bio

Growing up in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, Coates often felt a sense of estrangement caused by the inauthenticity of his surroundings. This has become a central theme in his artwork as he sees this cognitive dissonance reflected in the broader social fabric of Australia.

After dropping out of high school, Robert was accepted into art school solely on the merits of his portfolio. But his restless nature and dislike of institutions let him to leave before graduating, setting him on a journey through a plethora of places and communities on the rugged edges of society.

His myriad careers, from being a chef in inner city Sydney, to working as a builder in Western Australia, deep underground in the mines of the Tanami desert or abseiling waterfront high-rises has taken him across the Australian continent several times. Mirroring his working life, Robert’s art has a muscular physicality and urgency surrounding his creations.

His themes deal with his feelings about Australia, it’s history, the immense beauty of it and the sadness that resonates through the land and it’s people. In his work he explores the relationship we have to our surroundings, specifically in relation to his own country, but also more broadly interrogating the interconnectedness of everything with a raw, unforgiving spontaneity.

Robert has exhibited work in Sydney, Perth and Darwin
Most recently in the 2019 Mosman art prize, and in the 2019 Korean-Australian Art Prize.

Commissions

Rob's studio is in Sydney