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A landscape painting of green hills with dead trees under moody clouds

Weird Melancholy: The Australian Gothic

When

This exhibition has now ended.

Location

The Potter Museum of Art, Cnr of Swanston St and Masson Rd, Parkville

The gothic tradition – dealing with alienation, violence and a powerful, if imaginary, oppressor – held great appeal for nineteenth century Australian writers wishing to convey their experience of the ‘new world’. The University’s collection of early landscape painting shows that our most celebrated artists were not free of anxieties about the natural environment and the ghosts that haunt it; indeed, many could not escape them.

Weird Melancholy brought together works from the nineteenth century to the contemporary era. The exhibition revealed how artists are attempting to confront the ‘weirdness’ of their home and in doing so engaged tropes of the colonial gothic tradition. From Eugene von Guerard’s meticulous botanical forests, to Hugh Ramsay’s moody portraits; from the oppressive verticality of Fred Williams’ gum trees to Louise Hearman’s spectral presences and otherworldly landscapes, Weird Melancholy uncovers traces of the gothic and demonstrates its persistence over the centuries in Australian visual art.

Curated by Suzette Wearne.