This article interrogates colonial representations of landscape in Tasmania from a perspective of practice-based research and reflective action-research. Adopting an entwined process of art-inquiry and critical examination of historical examples of colonial Tasmanian landscape art, the role of the artist in relation to what is included or omitted in depictions of landscape is examined to ascertain implications for meaning making. The choices an artist makes in relation to how they construct a particular aesthetic of the land is likened to a process of sanitisation; a process laden with discreet yet significant decision making to appeal to a particular sensibility or agenda. In exploring the notion of sanitised landscape in Tasmania, an acknowledgment of constructed realities begins to emerge through an evolving experimentation across media. In the context of the formative inquiry underpinning this article, insight into how constructions are reflective of artists’ use of media in relation to interaction with and interpretation of history, culture, society and experience at a given time, becomes apparent.
History
Publication title
Journal of Artistic and Creative Education
Volume
12
Pagination
6-20
ISSN
1832-0465
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
Melbourne Graduate School of Education
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2018 Journal of Artistic and Creative Education
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
The creative arts; Arts not elsewhere classified; Expanding knowledge in the environmental sciences