As part of the inaugural display for Wurrdha Marra, select works from the NGV Collection are presented in the atrium foyer gallery. These works include Maree Clarke’s glass eel trap, Ancestral memory I, 2019, and Lorraine Connelly-Northey’s Wire bags, 2013, made using discarded farming materials. Each of these artists actively reclaims and celebrates the processes of customary creation, ritual and artistic expression.
Ancestral memory I is a suspended glass installation fabricated during Maree Clarke’s residency at Canberra Glassworks in 2019. The installation references the migratory paths that short- finned eels take within sewers and underground waterways across and underneath Melbourne. The breeding grounds of these eels are believed to be somewhere in the Coral Sea. During their journey from the tropics to Victorian waterways, the eels metamorphose into clear and tubular animals, before taking on their final pigmented form. Aboriginal people from south-east Australia have traditionally observed and interacted with eels as signs of seasonal change, as well as sources of food.
These three wire bags produced in 2013 were displayed for the first time at the NGV for the exhibition Melbourne Now. Each sculpture is made from coiled fencing wire and has been supersized, reflecting the scale of destruction that followed post- European arrival in Australia. In an interview from 2014, Connelly-Northey described her process and reflections when working with this material, saying: ‘I thought about how this fencing wire was where my mum was living, on missions and reserves and how wire was used to keep mum in, like sheep in a paddock, but also to keep her out of her traditional Country, to go and hunt and gather, and those kind of things’.