ACCA is pleased to present Future Remains: The 2024 Macfarlane Commissions, the fourth edition of a multi-year partnership with The Macfarlane Fund that supports ambitious new artworks by emerging and mid-career artists. Future Remains presents seven commissions by artists from across Australia who variously reclaim, restage and reframe specific material, cultural or ideological inheritances in an effort not only to better understand the past and present, but to generate new possibilities for the future.
Future Remains brings together works by Kim Ah Sam, Andy Butler, Teelah George, Alexandra Peters, Joel Sherwood Spring, Nicholas Smith and Salote Tawale. Collectively, these artists engage with a broad range of historical reference points, from family stories and lore, the annals of pop-culture and industry, art and architectural genealogies, to state archives and collections. These works, by turn, honour and critique, celebrate and thwart the legacies they address, inviting us to contemplate the gifts and burdens of that which we inherit.
Future Remains brings together works by Kim Ah Sam, Andy Butler, Teelah George, Alexandra Peters, Joel Sherwood Spring, Nicholas Smith and Salote Tawale. Collectively, these artists engage with a broad range of historical reference points, from family stories and lore, the annals of pop-culture and industry, art and architectural genealogies, to state archives and collections. These works, by turn, honour and critique, celebrate and thwart the legacies they address, inviting us to contemplate the gifts and burdens of that which we inherit.
Many of the works in Future Remains are deeply personal, baring traces of the artist's hand, their body, their life. These intimate specifics provide a starting point to reflect on broader social and political conditions. Standing as future relics of our current era, they engage with some of the big issues of our times—the extractive logic of capital and its institutions, geo-political relations in our region, environmental degradation, cultural displacement and dispossession, and the yearning for belonging in an increasingly fragmented world. While mapping the historical dynamics and ideologies that have led to these contemporary circumstances, the exhibition champions the potential for transformation and change, reminding us that the future remains to be made.
The Macfarlane Fund is a philanthropic initiative established in 2017 to honour the life of respected Melbourne businessman Donald (Don) Macfarlane, who throughout his life took immense pleasure in the arts. The Macfarlane Fund's primary focus is to offer financial support across the career span of artists, with programs developed to support emerging, mid-career and senior artists.
Curator: Shelley McSpedden.
Press release courtesy Australian Centre for Contemporary Art | ACCA.
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Nicholas Smith, Body II (2023). Courtesy of the artist and Hayden’s, Melbourne. Photo: Anna Kučera.