View all
View all

1 of 7

UK Frederick: Unseeded

UK Frederick

A$35

In Stock

Unseeded is very much a reflection on looking. It specifically addresses the archaeological pursuit, and its efforts to locate the presence of past cultural activities and lifeways. Each of the glass forms emulates the physical shape of a boab nut, but they are also intended to act as a kind of lens … A lens can reveal, but it can also magnify and distort; different lenses create different visions.
— UK Frederick, 2021

In late May 2019, artist UK Frederick (Ursula) joined an archaeological field trip to the Ningbing Range, a landscape of ancient Devonian limestone in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. As part of the part of a research commission from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH) Frederick joined in a search for sites with evidence of ancient human occupation. The survey team included Sue O’Connor, a Chief Investigator with CABAH based at The Australian National University, Miriwoong and Gajirrabeng rangers and Traditional Owners, archaeologists from the University of Western Australia and volunteer ecologists. The group camped in the ancient, rugged ranges and set out each day on foot, by 4WD or helicopter, searching for sites – caves and shelters – with evidence of occupation by Aboriginal people up to 50,000 years ago, observing as they went the presence of mature boab trees near the entrances to many of the sites. As the evening ritual of carving boab nuts around the campfire took hold, the nuts became an emblem of their joint endeavour.

In a fusion of UK Frederick’s interests in archaeology and photography the resulting work, Unseeded, questions our confidence that seeing is believing. Both art and science have a preoccupation with looking, but what happens when you don’t find what you’re looking for? Frederick’s creative response to the field trip focuses on the emotions that colour scientific endeavour.

“Sue and I have worked really closely with glass artists, and my images, and our impressions and experiences of that field trip to try to encapsulate the notion of discovery, disappointment, expectation, landscape, and the variety of emotional experiences you have in the field.”

UK Frederick is a Canberra/Ngunnawal/Ngambri-based artist whose primary modes of art practice are photography, printmaking and video. As an interdisciplinary researcher, she is interested in processes of contemporary archaeology, interdisciplinary practices, visual anthropology, material culture, cultural heritage and the environment. In 2014 she completed her PhD in Visual Arts at The Australian National University.

CABAH’s research aims to tell a culturally inclusive, globally significant history of Australia’s people and environments over the last 130,000 years. With nodes at eight universities across Australia, CABAH seeks to deepen understanding of this continent’s unique cultural and natural history, informing how we conserve and manage Australia’s biodiversity and cultural heritage today and into the future.

The artwork and the scientific research have been supported by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council Centres of Excellence scheme (Project Number CE170100015). Views expressed are those of the artists and are not necessarily those of the Australian Government or Australian Research Council.

Publisher
CABAH

Contributors
Paul Collis , Lynette Russell , Sue O'Connor , Jane Balme , Peter Veth, Deborah Ely , Jane Lydon , Rodney Harrison

Publication Date
September 2024

Editor
Judith Blackall, Sarah Gory

Design
Small Tasks

ISBN
9781741283976

Pages
141

Format
paperback, 24 x 16.7 cm