LANDMARKS
‘Natural markers help us establish our location in the bush, they also act as distance markers, as cues to let us know how much further we have to travel, and how close we are to home. I recall my first bush trip into Wilinggin (Ngarinyin) Country, driving with Matthew (Dembal) Martin in the passenger seat, listening as he pointed out landmarks along the roadside and cattle ahead in the distance with subtle flicks of his hand.’
As an arts worker and visitor to Country, I learnt how to read and navigate the bush predominantly under the care of Traditional Owners as we worked together on community projects. The landmarks in this exhibition reference two hills visible while driving through the Wunaamin Miliwundi Ranges on the Ngarinyin side. A reminder of heading out bush along the Gibb River Road and coming home.’
BACKTRACK
“Living in the West Kimberley for over a decade, immersed in nature, has been a defining life experience. Besides years living off the grid in the savannah surrounding Booroola (Derby), as a remote arts worker I regularly moved through Wandjina Wunggurr territories while supporting community art and heritage projects.”
Backtrack, a solo exhibition by Katie Breckon, reflects the artist’s decade of living and working in the West Kimberley, with the works on display being just a small selection from her oeuvre. Originally from Pōneke Wellington, New Zealand, Breckon moved to the isolated region to become a remote arts worker. For Breckon, observing and creatively reflecting on landscape or Country has been central to feeling a sense of home.
Living and working alongside First Nations communities as a visitor on cultural homelands, Breckon is committed to finding ways to respectfully reflect her lived experience as a guest on Country. This has required her to gain permission to work creatively with imagery and maps, with Ngarinyin approvals in place for her works that chart Wilinggin Country and speak to place.
Breckon’s works are centred around mark-making practices. They reflect her observations of the natural world – depicting the plants and landmarks she’s encountered – while also rendering maps of the many journeys she’s taken. The works do not seek to map a cultural topography, but to author a personal record, a chronicling of time and experience that’s simultaneously an act of catharsis.
Breckon’s practice – rhythmic and meditative in its pace, offers a timely reminder that through generous, meaningful, two-way exchange, settler artists can find ways to creatively reflect the influence that Country, and all held within its embrace, has on them and the works they create.
Backtrack was exhibited at Fremantle Art Centre as part of Marawar-ak | From the West: Contemporary Art from Western Australia, Nov - Jan 2023 curated by Glenn Iseger-Pilkington.