Living Rocks: A Fragment of the Universe, 2018
Hugo Michell Gallery, Adelaide, Australia
James Darling & Lesley Forwood, Living Rocks: A Fragment of the Universe, 2018, digital video (20 minute loop) 1.5 tonnes Mallee root & 4,000 litres of water, 16.12 x 4.64 m, at Hugo Michell Gallery
Artist Statement
It was a cloudless, high-summer’s day when Lesley and I, following the neighbouring farmer’s instructions, found our way in the ute to the edge of Lake Hawdon South, two ranges inland from the coast of South Australia between Beachport and Robe.
An ecologist had told us that we would find thrombolites, the rare rock-like microbial structures which, when they emerge from beneath water, photosynthesize. Thrombolites and stromatolites are both microbialites whose structures colonize lake floors and which, over billions of years, supplied the first large quantities of oxygen to the atmosphere of our planet.
As we waded into the shallow water towards the thrombolites, water birds in their thousands took to the air, screeching and squawking as they wheeled around us – before settling at a distance.
The sky grew quiet.
Lake Hawdon South was a vast, flat, ethereal, other-worldly environment: timeless and endless. Air and water merged as if without demarcation.
That visit set us on a trail to the edge of conception.
We learnt that evidence was hard to come by.
We learnt that microbialites were the only form of life inhabiting the planet for almost three billion years.
What was our planet three billion years ago?
How could a connection be established between then and now?
How could that relationship find expression, not as nature study, but as art?
This exhibition is about conception, where fragments and the imagination reside.
Living Rocks celebrates the physical presence of thrombolites.
It celebrates microbial life.
Looking back and looking forward, the concept of microbialites as the “disaster-recovery” or default ecosystem of our planet, and perhaps of many others, speaks of genesis and genius.
At its core, Living Rocks: A Fragment of the Universe is a memory of our origin and a prophesy of our future.
James Darling, June 2018
This project has been achieved in collaboration with:
Jumpgate VR
Anton Andreacchio: Managing Director
Piers Mussared, Carlo Andreacchio, Edward Watson
The Australian String Quartet
Composer: Paul Stanhope, String Quartet No 2 III. Dirge (Variations)
Commissioned for Musica Viva Australia by Kim Williams AM for the Pavel Haas String Quartet
Performed by the Australian String Quartet
Dale Barltrop – Violin I
Francesca Hiew – Violin II
Stephen King – Viola
Sharon Grigoryan – Cello
Used with permission by Paul Stanhope and the Australian String Quartet.
Copyright Australian String Quartet 2017
The ASQ is Quartet-in-Residence at the University of Adelaide, Elder Conservatorium and greatly values the support of its current sponsors and supporters.
Recorded at UKARIA Cultural Centre, Mt Barker, South Australia – December 2017
Stephen Snelleman – Producer
Russell Thomson – Engineer
Alex Stinson – Editing and Mastering
This recording will be commercially available later in 2018. For more information phone 1800 040 444
Distinctive Gardens
Rob Cooper
enquiries@distinctivegardens.com.au
With Thanks:
Professor Dr Robert Burne
Emeritus Professor School of Earth and Environmental Science at The Australian National University
Professor Malcolm Walter AM, FAA
Emeritus Professor of Astrobiology School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences
University of New South Wales, Sydney
Freddy Komp
Mosaic Audio Visual