Aboriginal artist Jonathan Jones (Kamilaroi / Wiradjuri) has won prizes and made waves throughout Australia for his dazzling installations of fluorescent tubes and incandescent bulbs.
Read MoreUsing everyday materials such as electric cabling, household light bulbs and tarpaulin, Jones reveals textural surfaces and dynamic plays of light and shadow that are compellingly beautiful and highly nuanced. Although the cross-hatching and chevron motifs he creates from fluorescent tubes may appear as cool Western minimalism, for Jones they also refer to the Aboriginal concerns of country and community – their designs based upon the carved patterning of Koori (south-eastern Aboriginal) shields and the markings on possum-skin cloaks. For the viewer experiencing the artworks at first hand there is a sense of immersion in both light and heat, as bright lines and dark shadows shimmer and reflect around the gallery walls.
Hetti Perkins, Aboriginal Curator at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, writes that 'although the resonance of light suggests the living human presence ... so too [Jones'] works serve as a memento mori to those whose past lives continue to light our way'.
Jones' work has been acquired by collections including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Chartwell Collection at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, the National Gallery of Australia, and Queensland Art Gallery & Gallery of Modern Art.
Text courtesy Tim Melville.