Melbourne Now: Jan Nelson

 

Installation view of Jan Nelson’s work on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Sean Fennessy

 

RMIT School of Art is thrilled to see so many staff, students and alumni featured in the NGV exhibition Melbourne Now.

Today we feature lecturer Dr Jan Nelson.

Lecturer Dr Jan Nelson is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice covers painting, photography, sculpture and installation. Her work is permeated with layers of personal experience, particularly of her formative years amid the social, political and cultural climate of the 1970s. Preoccupied with states of change, Nelson’s work unpacks the role of visual languages in the construction of self.

Black river running #13: 32kgs, 2018–22, and Black river running #14: 33.54 minutes, 2020–22, compiles and remixes Nelson’s previous works surrounding vulnerability, defiance and protest. A large-scale installation features an elevated rug made from hundreds of T-shirts adorned with activist and protest slogans, collected over a number of years before being colour-coded, cut into strips and crocheted into a four-metre circle. Designed to be sat and laid on by visitors, the rug becomes a domesticated and unstable embodiment of cumulative social causes through time — some just as pertinent today as they were fifty years ago. Hanging adjacent to the rug are a series of eight wind chimes, each playing key notes from a selection of protest songs from the past century, evoking the role of the individual voice in collective activism. As visitors walk through the shadowy forest of anodised aluminium chimes, they too play a part in this ongoing, collective cacophony of dissent. The titles refer to the weight of the rug and the running time of the eight songs combined.

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