© Jemima WYMAN, courtesy: Milani Gallery
Combat Drag
Artist | Jemima WYMAN |
---|---|
Year | 2008 |
Material/ Technique | DVD |
Copyright Notice | © Jemima WYMAN courtesy: Milani Gallery |
Year of acquisition/ donation | 2012(作品購入年月日:2012/03/16) |
Description | Born in Sydney, Australia in 1977. Lives and works in Brisbane, Australia and Los Angeles, USA. After graduating in visual arts from the Queensland University of Technology in 1997, Wyman obtained an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts in 2007. She creates videos, paintings, and photo collages that highlight the role of clothing in exposing or hiding the inner life of human beings. Combining reality and fiction, she examines the meaning of adaptation to the conventions and customs of society and relationships between individuals and groups. In 2005, she and Anna MEYER formed a performance duo called CamLab. All of her work turns a critical gaze on society with an expressive approach that utilizes humor. Wyman’s series of works entitled ‘Combat Drag’ was inspired by the Zapatistas, a guerilla organization based in Chiapas, Mexico. These works portray figures wearing balaclava masks like those used by the Zapatistas and deal with the ambiguity involved in conveying thoughts from inside a person to the outside and examining how inner realities are understood from the outside. The video work "Combat Drag" presents the spontaneous involvement of people in a resistance action and shows how determinations of difference and identity are closely related to the maintenance of community. The artist demonstrates the function of camouflage in preventing discovery with patterns of clothing in which figure and ground are blended. In the painting, "Camouflaged: New Zealand Four", she examines how the uniqueness of the individual can be buried in the social body and the environment. Wyman’s use of bright colors and close relationships between landscape and human beings intrudes on the viewer’s senses, producing a somewhat forced confrontation with reality that does not allow time for rational judgment. |
NOTES
This Collection Data page contains the works and materials in the collection of 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, as of April 1, 2018.
Artists are listed alphabetically by artist’s surname.
Works and materials by the same artists are listed according to the date of the work in principle.
Works whose dates are unidentified are listed at the end of each item. Some works are not listed according to the date of work due to their relations.
The data of works and materials are listed in order of title, production year, material/technique/form, dimensions, donor’s name, copyright holder and credit for photograph.
Dimensions are given by height (H) x width (W) in centimeters for plane work, and height (H) x width (W) x depth (D) in cm for 3-D work. Diameter (Ø) is used for circular work.
For the name of country or city, the name currently used in English is listed in principle.