Skip to main content
Back to all events

Brad Darkson: Ruled Us, Ruled Us, Ruled Us

Presented by

Adelaide Contemporary Experimental

Register your spot

Event details

Sessions

Venue opening hours

  • Tuesday 10:00 - 16:00
  • Wednesday 10:00 - 16:00
  • Thursday 10:00 - 16:00
  • Friday 10:00 - 16:00
  • Saturday 10:00 - 16:00
  • Sunday 10:00 - 16:00

Tickets

$0 - Free

Event description

A specially commissioned offsite project by multi-disciplinary artist Brad Darkson.

Set within the Museum of Economic Botany in the leafy Adelaide Botanic Garden, Ruled Us, Ruled Us, Ruled Us is a specially commissioned offsite project by multi-disciplinary artist Brad Darkson, made in consultation with Ngangki Burka, Senior Kaurna Woman Aunty Lynette Crocker and Uncle Moogy Sumner.
Bringing together sound, sculpture and digital collage, the work has been developed in response to the transmutations that South Australia’s social and physical environment has undergone since first contact with the British.

Two years in the making, Ruled Us, Ruled Us, Ruled Us was initiated as part of a curatorial mentorship between Patrice Sharkey (Artistic Director, Adelaide Contemporary Experimental) and Louise O’Kelly (Founding Director and Curator, Block Universe, London) focussed on commissioning artwork in response to non-traditional settings.

Inside the Museum of Economic Botany, the last complete collection of its kind in the world, the voice of Aunty Lynette Crocker is heard. She speaks about the ongoing impact of colonisation, not only on First Nations people, but also the plants and animals that live on Country. Where previously Country was cared for, the new inhabitants valued what could be used for commercial purposes, and disregarded or decimated the rest.

The Museum’s cabinets now hold new objects brought into the space by Darkson, his family and members of Community, and carved objects using materials collected from the living collection of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens are displayed in the gallery. These objects assert the traditional uses for native plants and trees. They are presented alongside a series of manipulated and collaged photographs sourced from archival imagery of the Botanic Gardens and the Museum that date back 130 years. By adding and subtracting elements, Darkson’s images highlight the gaps in the record; where stories have been ignored, and the plants and trees that have supported people that have been overlooked.

Ruled Us, Ruled Us, Ruled Us is a collaborative act of resistance, introducing First Nations voices and cultural practices into an institution which has traditionally only viewed plants through a Western lens.

Feature Image: Brad Darkson, ‘shelter tree’ (2023), film photograph, digitally manipulated. Courtesy the artist and the State Library of South Australia.

Commissioned by Adelaide Contemporary Experimental and presented with support from the Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium.

This project is supported by Arts South Australia’s Arts Recovery Fund and the City of Adelaide’s Public Art Grant.

Presented as part of the South Australian Living Artists (SALA) Festival.

Accessibility