Simryn Gill Flashcards

1
Q

When was Simryn Gill born?

A

1959

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2
Q

Name two Simryn Gill artworks

A

‘Roadkill’ and ‘Forking tongues’

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3
Q

When was ‘Roadkill’ displayed?

A

1999-2000

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4
Q

When was ‘Forking tongues’ displayed?

A

1992

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5
Q

Describe the features of ‘Roadkill’

A

Found run-over objects on wheels, such as combs, crushed cans, and children’s toys

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6
Q

Describe the features of ‘Forking tongues’

A

EPNS (electroplated nickel silver) cutlery and chilli in a large spiral on the floor

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7
Q

What do most of Simryn Gill’s artworks focus on?

A

Migration, identity, history, Indigenousness, and colonialism - she is a Singaporean immigrant

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8
Q

What are the main themes in ‘Roadkill’?

A

Migration and identity

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9
Q

What do the discarded found materials in ‘Roadkill’ represent?

A
  • They have been given a second chance and are now the main focus
  • Indigenous communities have been ‘discarded’ and mistreated by governments
  • now being brought into the spotlight to be used as political fuel
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10
Q

What do the wheels on the objects in ‘Roadkill’ imply?

A
  • movement
  • bring use/function to new place
  • immigrants bringing skills
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11
Q

What does turning the objects in ‘Roadkill’ into mini cars represent?

A
  • ironic - cars destroyed the objects
  • pressure on Indigenous communities to assimilate
  • Western civilsation stripped rights and culture
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12
Q

What is the main theme in ‘Forking tongues’?

A

Effects of colonialism in South Asia

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13
Q

What does the EPNS cutlery represent in ‘Forking tongues’?

A
  • widely used by British colonies incl. South Asia
  • what is common ≠ Indigenous
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14
Q

What does the use of chilli in ‘Forking tongues’ represent?

A
  • from South America
  • introduced to South Asia
  • chilli is so commonly used in food it gets mistaken for being native
  • if enough people accept something as part of culture, does it make it native?
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15
Q

What does the open-ended spiral in ‘Forking tongues’ represent?

A
  • implies possibility for addition/cultural amalgamation
  • cultural mixing is not unwelcome
  • important to recognise Indigenous vs introduced
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