
Eurotipodes Arriving – Take Your Medicine
archival photomontage on cotton rag paper (no. 1 in edition of 7) 100 x 43 cm
$ 3,950 (framed)
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Lewin’s kangaroo stares waving a British flag into an uncertain future whilst native fairy like phasmids flit and rise. An oversized giant castor oil plant frames this scene – an introduced invasive weed used for medicinal purposes including as a laxative… The flag is the British flag that was planted on European arrival. References: - The Founding of Australia. By Capt Arthur Phillip RN Sydney Cove, Jan 26th 1788 1937 By Algernon Talmage RA (flag) - 'Kangaroos in a Landscape’ John Lewin 1819 - Ricinus (castor oil plant - Ricinus communis), c.1806 by Lewin.
Anna Glynn
Eurotipodes - Colonial Capsize
2022
Photomontage on 310gsm cotton rag
No. 1 in edition of 5 plus 2 artist’s proofs
38 x 50cm / 57 x 64cm framed
In ‘Eurotipodes - Colonial Capsize’ a semitransparent horse hangs upside down, merged with a kangaroo in a red colonial landscape. The diaphanous layered landscape reimagines colonial paintings from the Mitchell Library, referencing time, ecological and cultural change. Two iconic creatures are joined. In this work Glynn is reflecting on what is an ‘Australian’ landscape?
Anna Glynn
Eurotipodes Awaiting – Kangaroo & Sofa
2023
Archival photomontage on cotton rag paper
Edition of 7 plus 2 artist’s proofs
100 x 84cm / 103 x 87cm framed
This work includes references to ‘Sydney Harbour Looking West’, 1848, by Jacob Janssen.
From archives and public collections Glynn digitally captured colonial paintings, furniture, sculptures, flora and fauna. Combining these images with contemporary nature photography, Glynn creates multilayered imagery. A world of fantasia, a place on the cusp of reality and imagination.
Anna Glynn
Extinction Game - Norfolk Island Kaka
2020
Pencil and watercolour on Stonehenge 250gsm paper
95 x 62cm unframed / 120 x 80cm framed
'Extinction Game - Norfolk Island Kaka’ reimagines a historical portrait of an extinct Norfolk Island Kaka, surviving in captivity until 1851. The parakeet perches, a losing player.
The black and white chess board expresses the ‘game’ of survival.