PLAN YOUR VISIT - Please note Bundanon is closed Easter Friday 18 April. We are open Easter Saturday & Sunday 19-20 April and Anzac Day Friday 25 April.

Bundanon

Lynne Roberts-Goodwin

Art Form: Visual Art

Residency Year: 2022

Lives / works: Land of the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation

Lynne Roberts-Goodwin is an Australian artist whose photo-based installations have been shown internationally. Her projects are most often created in relation to archival, cultural and/or historically resonant locations within extreme terrains globally.

With engagement at remote sites undertaken in situ or aerial elevated positioning, she engages with the politics of contested sites, aligned with and acknowledging contemporary culture. Utilizing media such as photographic, video, and sculptural forms, work to date has conceptually questioned the aftermath of landscape and more recently, concepts of navigational failure, engaging the oblique lens of spatial aesthetics, i.e., the complex entanglements between local and global ideas of place.

Accumulatively, Roberts-Goodwin’s projects form an ongoing estranged journey or narrative, tracking complex conditions of place that have had an impact upon cultural consciousness.

Roberts-Goodwin and her work has been the subject of national and international residencies, fellowship awards and exhibitions within key cultural institutions, museums, and galleries. Her work is held in significant private and public collections.

In residence at Bundanon

The project engages in meteorological and sensorial studies of atmospheric envelopment, focused on the areas’ unique topography, cultural history, and prevailing weather conditions and their elemental variations.

Through observation, imaging, and sculptural interpretation of the aesthetics of atmospheres, particularly wind-shifts and their actions/presence/effects, the project speculates on the instability between figure/object and ground, and the ambiguous relationships linking material surface and visual illusion, to produce object-based works and aligned still/moving imagery. Affording focused time, the project considers the agency of wind and envelopment, caretaking, and awareness of narratives surrounding relationships to place in an era of dramatic change.

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Bundanon acknowledges the people of the Dharawal and Dhurga language groups as the traditional owners of the land within our boundaries, and recognises their continuous connection to culture, community and Country.

In Dharawal the word Bundanon means deep valley.

This website contains names, images and voices of deceased Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

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