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SKA project featured in global art show

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— Collaborative exhibition explores Australian and South African shared sky —

A collaborative exhibition by artists from Australia and South Africa, exploring the skies as seen through the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) radio telescope project, will launch at Curtin University’s John Curtin Gallery today.

Yamaji and other Aboriginal artists from the Mid-West region of Western Australia and African artists of San descent and others from the central Karoo region of South Africa’s Northern and Eastern Cape, have created artworks in response to ancestral stories about the night sky – a sky they both share as it appears above their own traditional homelands.

These sparsely populated, remote areas were specifically chosen for the SKA because of their radio-quietness and isolation, making them the perfect sites to co-develop the SKA – the world’s largest radio telescope – itself a collaboration between governments, scientists and engineers from around the world.

They are also both sites of rich and ancient traditions that have largely disappeared from view in their ancestral lands but live on strongly in the spirit of the artists working in the community-based art centres of Nieu Bethesda in South Africa and Geraldton and Mullewa in Western Australia.

Australian Square Kilometre Array Director, Professor Brian Boyle said this art project reflected the collaborative nature of the SKA project itself.

“These are two very different locations, half a world apart, connected by a shared night sky, who will soon share the world’s largest telescope too,” Professor Boyle said.

“Now is a great time to take stock and look back on the history and cultural understanding of the night sky, as well as look forward to developing more understanding about that sky and the history of the Universe than ever before.”

John Curtin Gallery Director Chris Malcolm said this exhibition was an opportunity for these artists to come together and share their own stories.

“This exhibition is all about learning from each other and celebrating the differences and embracing the common ancestry that links us all when we gaze upon the Shared Sky,” Mr Malcom said.

“Ancient creation stories handed down through oral traditions over thousands of years in both continents are reflected in the moving vista of the Milky Way that is depicted in many artworks from both Africa and Australia.”

The exhibition runs at the John Curtin Gallery from 1 October to 2 November 2014, before touring SKA-member countries around the world.

Shared Sky is proudly presented by the John Curtin Gallery in association with: the international SKA Organisation; SKA-South Africa; SKA-Australia; Yamaji Art, Geraldton, Australia and the First People Centre, Bethesda Arts Centre, Nieu Bethesda, South Africa.

 

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