Gordon Bennett
Gordon Bennett is a young urban Aboriginal painter that is emerging as a leading Australian artist. Gordon was born in Monto, Queensland in 1955. He was the son of an aboriginal mother and an English father. Gordon had been brought up as a part of the white community and had no knowledge of his aboriginal origins until he was eleven years old. Gordon saw himself as European for many years and he didn’t mind except it was damaging in a sense that he was ashamed to be aboriginal. Being brought up as a white Australian he had built a conceptual barrier between himself and other people who were of aboriginal background but eventually that barrier collapsed and at a young age Gordon was forced to juggle between his European but also his aboriginal culture. These two cultures, of course, did not mix. He was labelled as ‘boong, coon, and darkie’ and bridging the two cultures was so difficult that he left school at the age of fifteen and became an apprentice fitter and turner. He married Leanne in 1977 and they had spent 19 years together. When Leanne met Gordon she was aware that he was aboriginal but fortunately for her it was not an issue. Gordon also worked for Telecom for eleven years whic
Bennett’s art contains numerous references to Australian culture, Aboriginal history, inter-racial relations, politics and life in the suburbs. He is now vitally concerned with the issues relating to cultural identity, especially within a historical context. He appropriates and re- contextualises various images, that have accumulated historical meaning and re-presents these visual fragments in new ways. An example of such painting is ‘outsider.’ Vincent Van Gogh had greatly influenced Gordon and this painting makes a clear visual reference to Van Goghs ‘bedroom at Arles’, which was painted in 1888. painting a hundred years later, during Australia’s Bicentennial year Bennett reflected on the many negative connotations of this ‘celebration’ for Australian Aborigines, especially with regard to the murder and suppression of an indigenous culture. Bennett sees Van Gogh as an outsider and regards himself and other Aborigines in the same way. Bennett said ‘outsider to me is a self portrait revealing to me both an empathetic response to Vincent and a hostility from part of myself, my Aboriginal heritage which I had learnt to despise and am now learning to accept, through art.’ In the outsider Bennett used one of the bedroom scenes Van Gogh painted when he was expecting a visit from Gogan. All of Vincent’s dreams disappearing and basically causing him to behave irrationally and cut of part of his ear really inspired Gordon. For that reason he inserted the Aboriginal headless body into that bedroom. In a way ‘bedroom at Arles’ is an icon of European culture and it was a quite confrontational thing to do, to place the aboriginal headless figure with the blood sporting upwards to join with another one of Van Gogh’s famous works ‘starry night.’ Bennett’s painting ‘self portrait (but I always wanted to be one of the good guys)’ is an appropriation of McCahon’s ‘victory over death 2.’ In this artwork he unproblematically constructs his European identity. The composition of Bennett’s picture is borrowed from it with the words “I AM” appearing in a related configuration. While in McCahon’s painting the letters “I AM” are just black letters, in Bennett’s picture the outlines of these words are filled with images of conflict. Bennett’s own version of McCahon’s painting is quite ironic in that there is an Aboriginal child dressed in a cowboy suit when dark people are always said to be the ‘bad’ guys and the cowboys, the white people, are always the ‘good’ guys.
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Approximate Word count = 1901
Approximate Pages = 8 (250 words per page double spaced)
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