Dr Marcus Bunyan
Dr Marcus Bunyan is an Australian artist and writer. His art work explores the boundaries of identity and place. He writes Art Blart, an art and cultural memory archive, which posts mainly photography exhibitions from around the world. He holds a Doctor of Philosophy from RMIT University, Melbourne, a Master of Arts (Fine Art Photography) from RMIT University, and a Master of Art Curatorship from the University of Melbourne.
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Marcus Bunyan black and white archive: ‘Orphans and small groups’ 1994-96 Part 2
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Recent Posts
- Exhibition: ‘ “I’ll Have What She’s Having”: The Jewish Deli’ at the New-York Historical Society
- Text: “In Press” chapter from Marcus Bunyan’s PhD research ‘Pressing the Flesh: Sex, Body Image and the Gay Male’, RMIT University, Melbourne, 2001
- Exhibition: ‘Peter Booth’ at TarraWarra Museum of Art, Healesville
- Exhibition: ‘Barbara Hepworth: In Equilibrium’ at the Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
- Exhibitions: ‘Australian Airliners Across the Pacific’, ‘Airmail Down Under’ and ‘Flying the Southern Cross Route: Seventy-Five years of Australian Commercial Air Service to North America’ at SFO Museum, San Francisco international airport
- Exhibition: ‘Documentary Genealogies: Photography 1848-1917’ at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid
- Exhibition: ‘The Stillness of Things: Photographs from the Lane Collection’ at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
- Exhibition: ‘Uta Barth: Peripheral Vision’ at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
- Exhibition: ‘Chris Killip, Retrospective’ at The Photographers’ Gallery, London
- Exhibition: ‘Cameos – Masterpieces in Miniature’ at National Museum of Antiquities of the Netherlands (Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, RMO), Leiden
- Exhibition: ‘Jan Groover. Laboratory of Forms’ at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson, Paris
- Exhibition: ‘Luces y Sombras: Images of Mexico | Photographs from the Bank of America Collection’ at the Tacoma Art Museum
- Text: ‘Golden splendour: privilege, ceremony and racism in 1920s-1930s Australia’ on the photo album ‘John “Jack” Riverstone Faviell (1892-1960), 1922-1933’ Part 2
- Exhibition: ‘Gordon Parks: Stokely Carmichael and Black Power’ at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
- Exhibition: ‘Life Magazine and the Power of Photography’ at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA)
Lastest tweets
- Exhibition: '"I'll Have What She's Having": The Jewish Deli' at the New-York Historical Society… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
- Exhibition: '"I'll Have What She's Having": The Jewish Deli' at the New-York Historical Society… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
- Exhibition: '"I'll Have What She's Having": The Jewish Deli' at the New-York Historical Society… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 day ago
- Text: "In Press" chapter from Marcus Bunyan's PhD research 'Pressing the Flesh: S**, Body Image and the Gay Male',… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 week ago
- Text: "In Press" chapter from Marcus Bunyan's PhD research 'Pressing the Flesh: S**, Body Image and the Gay Male',… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 week ago
- Text: "In Press" chapter from Marcus Bunyan's PhD research 'Pressing the Flesh: S**, Body Image and the Gay Male',… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 week ago
Top Posts
- Exhibition: 'Hold That Pose: Erotic Imagery in 19th Century Photography' at the Kinsey Institute, Bloomington, Indiana Part 2
- Exhibition: 'nude men: from 1800 to the present day' at the Leopold Museum, Vienna / Text: Marcus Bunyan. "Historical Pressings," from 'Pressing the Flesh: Sex, Body Image and the Gay Male' Phd research, RMIT University, 2001
- Photographs: 'Weegee (Arthur Fellig) (1899-1968) – 9 crime-scene photographs' c. 1930s
- Exhibition: 'Chris Killip, Retrospective' at The Photographers' Gallery, London
- Exhibition: 'Eva Besnyö 1910-2003: The Sensuous Image' at Jeu de Paume, Paris
- Photographs and text: George Platt Lynes and the male nude
- Exhibition: ' "I'll Have What She's Having": The Jewish Deli' at the New-York Historical Society
- Exhibition: 'Mary Ellen Mark: Girlhood' at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington
- International artists/exhibitions by name & posting
- Exhibition: 'Nan Goldin: The Ballad of Sexual Dependency' at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York
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Australia as an After Image: Middle Australia and the politics of fear
Tags: A Man is Born Without Fear, After Image, afterimage, ASIO surveillance, asylum seekers, Asylum seekers protesting against detention at Villawood Immigration Detention Centre, Australia, Australia as an After Image, Australia as an After Image: Middle Australia and the politics of fear, Australian elections, Australian nationalism, Australian racism, Author Frank Hardy in the doorway of the Building Workers Industrial Union, Ben Quilty, Ben Quilty Trooper M after Afghanistan, Cronulla race riots, Cronulla race riots 2005, Dr Marcus Bunyan, Frank Hardy, Gough Whitlam, Juan Davila, Juan Davila A Man is Born Without Fear, Keast Burke, Keast Burke Husbandry 1, Mervyn Bishop, Mervyn Bishop Prime Minister Gough Whitlam pours soil into the hands of traditional land owner Vincent Lingiari, Middle Australia, Middle Australia and the politics of fear, MV Tampa, Persons Of Interest - ASIO surveillance 1949 -1980, portrait of an Australian nation, Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, Tamp affair, the politics of fear, Villawood Immigration Detention Centre, Vincent Lingiari
June 2016
David Moore (Australia 06 Apr 1927 – 23 Jan 2003)
Migrants arriving in Sydney
1966, printed later
Gelatin silver photograph
30.2 x 43.5cm image
35.7 x 47.0cm sheet
Gift of the artist 1997
© Lisa, Karen, Michael and Matthew Moore
“An afterimage … is an optical illusion that refers to an image continuing to appear in one’s vision after the exposure to the original image has ceased.”1
I don’t usually mix politics and art on this website but today, before the general election this Saturday in Australia, I ask this question: what kind of country do we want in the future? One that cares about human beings of all ages, races, sexualities, socio-economic positions and health – or one that has no vision for the future and which is governed by market greed.
As an immigrant I am forever grateful that I can call Australia home. I arrived in 1986 and got to stay as a permanent resident because of a gay de facto relationship. I was one of the lucky few. But today, dear friends, I feel that something has gone terribly wrong with this country. Looking back nearly 30 years later I wonder what has happened to that progressive country that was an unpolished diamond, a bit rough around the edges but generous and welcoming when I arrived all those years ago. Things seem to have gone backwards, terribly backwards over the last 30 years. It’s almost as though the country of hope and fun that I arrived in is just an afterimage located in my memory, a vision that continues to flicker in the recesses of the mind but is no longer present in actuality.
Today, as with many countries in the Western world which are edging towards the right through a “conservative movement” with clearly defined tenets and agenda, we live in a country governed by the politics of fear. This politics of fear – grounded in rampant capitalism where making a buck takes precedence over the lives of people: its business – and linked to the Christian fundamentalist right and the “re-engagement between church and state” – is, as David Kindon notes, “moving Australia away from the notion of a secular democracy.”2
Australia is now a less generous place than it was 30 years ago, ruled by god-given, government-aligned order. Bugger the pensioners, cut the arts program funding, get rid of public health care, call for plebiscite on gay marriage where the bigots can come out of the woodwork and other people decide whether you are deemed “equal” to them, imprison vulnerable people in state run concentration camps where the government has the right to hurt other people… and the list goes on and on: Border Force as a quasi paramilitary force for our protection, more people in jail than at any time in our history (due to the privatisation of the jails = money, profit), and “new anti-protest laws [In New South Wales which] are the latest example of an alarming and unmistakeable trend. Governments across Australia are eroding some of the vital foundations of our democracy, from protest rights to press freedom, to entrench their own power and that of vested business interests.”3
Further, there is the “privatisation of government assets and services, attacks on public broadcasting services, deregulation of the private sector, and widespread cuts in the public sector.” (Kindon) As ever, the rich get richer, the miners get wealthier, and the poor get screwed. More entitlements were delivered to the wealthy and the corporate sector despite having seen the “end of the age of entitlement” announced by the Treasurer. Those very vested business interests.
This situation is not akin to the concept of “permanent temporariness” used to describe the plight of the Palestine State but is akin to that of a “permanent blindness” of a nation. Middle Australia will not hear what they don’t want to hear, will not see what they don’y want to see. Today, nationalism has become framed in terms of external (and internal) threats. Xenophobia in the recent Brexit poll in the UK is mirrored by simmering racism in this sun blessed country. Otherness, difference, liberal views, alternative thinking and, heaven forbidden, being an open and responsible member of the human race (on human rights, on global warming, on not being in wars we have no business being in) are all seen as threatening to the middle-brow status quo. Steady as she goes for “Team Australia” and if you’re not with us, you’re against us. Yes, let’s stick with this mob for a little while longer…
WAKE UP AUSTRALIA BEFORE ITS TOO LATE!
Dr Marcus Bunyan
1/ Anon. “Afterimage,” on the Wikipedia website [Online] Cited 21/09/2011
2/ David Kindon. “The Political Theology of Conservative Postmodern Democracies: Fascism by Stealth,” on the A Fairer Society website [Online] Cited 29/06/2016
3/ Hugh de Kretser. “NSW anti-protest laws are part of a corrosive national trend,” on The Sydney Morning Herald website March 22, 2016 [Online] Cited 03/02/2023
.
Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.
Mervyn Bishop (Australian, b. 1945)
Prime Minister Gough Whitlam pours soil into the hands of traditional land owner Vincent Lingiari, Northern Territory
1975
Type R3 photograph
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Hallmark Cards Australian Photography Collection Fund 1991
© Mervyn Bishop. Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
Persons Of Interest – Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) surveillance 1949-1980
Author Frank Hardy in the doorway of the Building Workers Industrial Union, 535 George St, Sydney, August 1955
NAA A9626, 212
Lifejacket and lifebuoy from the MV Tampa
2001
Wallenius Wilhelmsen MV Tampa collection
National Museum of Australia
“There was one man from Nauru who sent me a letter that I should have let him die in the Ind … the Indian Ocean, instead of picking him up. Because, the conditions on Nauru were terrible. And that is a terrible thing to tell people, that you should have just let them drown.” ~ Arne Rinnan, Captain of the MV Tampa
Juan Davila (Australian born Chile, b. 1946)
A Man is Born Without Fear
2010
© Juan Davila, Courtesy Kalli Rolfe Contemporary Art
J.W.C. Adam
Asylum seekers protesting against detention at Villawood Immigration Detention Centre on 22 April 2011
2011
CC BY-SA 2.5
“And when we call these places of horror in the Pacific ‘concentration camps’, that is an appropriate term, because that is what they are.
And when we accuse the Australian government of selectively torturing brown-skinned people in the way the Nazis chose the Jews and other groups to torture and ultimately eliminate, that is an appropriate thing to do, because we all know, in our heart of hearts, that if these people fleeing oppression were white, English-speaking Christians (white Zimbabweans, say) then their treatment would be completely different.”
David Berger. “It’s Okay to Compare Australia in 2016 with Nazi Germany – And Here’s Why,” on the New Matilda website May 22 2016 [Online] Cited 29/06/2016
Ben Quilty (Australian, b. 1973)
Trooper M, after Afghanistan
2012
Oil on linen
Collection of the artist
Keast Burke (New Zealand, Australia, 1896-1974)
Husbandry 1
c. 1940
Gelatin silver photograph, vintage
30.5 x 35.5cm image/sheet
Gift of Iris Burke 1989
Cronulla race riots 2005
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