H
culture
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

480 sheeps’ heads in jars: Dark Mofo opens with another gory provocation

1 day ago
A picture


Trawulwuy artist Nathan Maynard’s installation intends to educate on Tasmania’s violent past – but will the lesson be lostGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIn the dimly-lit basement of a former furniture store in Hobart CBD, 480 embalmed sheep’s heads in specimen jars are arranged on industrial shelving units: 24 racks, each four shelves high and with five jars per shelf, in a neat grid,The fastidiousness of the presentation sits at odds with the inherent violence of the material; so do the expressions on most of the sheep’s faces, which range from serene to uncanny smiles,As if to dispel any false sense of quietude, the room’s lighting periodically switches to nightmarish red,This is We threw them down the rocks where they had thrown the sheep, an installation by Trawulwuy artist Nathan Maynard, part of this year’s Dark Mofo festival – the first after the often controversial festival took a year off in favour of a “period of renewal”,Maynard’s exhibition was the first announcement for the festival’s return, and it drew some scepticism from members of the local Tasmanian Aboriginal community at the time.

When it was announced via a teaser post featuring the quote “What did you do with the bodies? – George Augustus Robinson, 1830”, Tasmanian Aboriginal heritage officer Fiona Hamilton criticised Dark Mofo’s “gory fascination with the pain of our people”,Academic Greg Lehman, a descendant of the Trawulwuy people of north-east Tasmania, compared the “ugly and tone-deaf” marketing of the project to the festival’s widely criticised 2021 commission by Spanish artist Santiago Sierra, who called for the donation of blood by First Nations people, in which to soak a union jack flag,Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morningThe festival cancelled Sierra’s work and apologised for the commission and their marketing of it, but its appetite for confronting – and gory – work is unabated,Visitors enter the space via a nondescript doorway on Collins Street marked by a red cross; an invigilator at the entrance warns them that the artwork “may or may not be confronting”,There’s no explanatory text or artist statement, and the artist agreed to only one interview, with the Indigenous-run paper Koori Mail – and on Thursday evening, the festival’s opening night, visitors navigated the installation with varying levels of bemusement.

Some entered the basement, saw the grisly cargo, and turned around and exited; others got their phones out and took pictures.When questioned by attenders, an invigilator at the room’s entrance gamely attempted to encapsulate the dark history that inspired the work, and the ongoing issues that motivated Maynard to create it.“We threw them down the rocks where they had thrown the sheep” is a quote from the journals of George Augustus Robinson, Tasmania’s “Chief Protector of Aborigines” from 1839 to 1849.Robinson was recounting an anecdote told to him with “perfect indifference” by a perpetrator of one of the state’s worst massacres: on 10 February 1828, four convict shepherds ambushed a group of Aboriginals at Cape Grim, in the island’s north-west, shooting and driving about 30 of them off a 60-metre cliff, supposedly in retaliation for the destruction of about the same number of sheep.In his journal, Robinson wrote that he had issued the perpetrators a warning.

The Cape Grim massacre is one of many that took place in Lutruwita/Tasmania during a state-orchestrated genocidal campaign against the island’s First Peoples known as the Black War (1824-1832).Generally, there were no formal or legal consequences for white perpetrators.Sign up to Saved for LaterCatch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tipsafter newsletter promotionMaynard told the Koori Mail last month that the massacre was “just one example in this country of where white people valued sheep more than black human life”.In a statement to Guardian Australia, Dark Mofo’s cultural adviser, Caleb Nichols-Mansell, said the work “encourages a deeper investigation of the history, our shared pasts and an honest interrogation around these topics and themes that we typically avoid within arts and cultural settings”.The presentation of the sheep’s heads in specimen jars points to a different kind of racist violence from the same era: the theft and trade of First Nations human remains, which occurred throughout Australia.

These remains entered the private collections of white settlers and officials or were sold to museums and scientific institutions.The campaign for their repatriation has been running since the 1970s.Meanwhile, just 200 metres from the basement where Maynard’s installation is held stands a statue of former governor Sir John Franklin, who is known to have collected the skulls of Aboriginal people.For visitors unaware of this context, the only clue is an audio track that plays in the corridor leading to the basement, featuring two voices – one Maynard’s – expressing condemnation, anger and distress over the historical and continuing treatment of ancestral remains.It’s hard to hear these voices clearly, but among the lines that cut through is the indelible exhortation: “Imagine it was your mother or your grandmother who was collecting dust in a museum basement!”Maynard told the Koori Mail he hoped the installation would educate non-Indigenous people on Tasmania’s violent past.

It remains to be seen whether the work’s enigmatic presentation will have the desired effect,We threw them down the rocks where they had thrown the sheep by Nathan Maynard can be seen at Coogan’s Building (79 Collins St), Hobart, on Saturday 7 June from 6pm-10pm; Sunday 8 June from 4pm-10pm; 12-14 June from 6pm-10pm; Sunday 15 June from 4pm-10pm, as part of Dark Mofo festival,
politicsSee all
A picture

Russia is at war with Britain and US is no longer a reliable ally, UK adviser says

Russia is at war with Britain, the US is no longer a reliable ally and the UK has to respond by becoming more cohesive and more resilient, according to one of the three authors of the strategic defence review.Fiona Hill, from County Durham, became the White House’s chief Russia adviser during Donald Trump’s first term and contributed to the British government’s strategy. She made the remarks in an interview with the Guardian.“We’re in pretty big trouble,” Hill said, describing the UK’s geopolitical situation as caught between “the rock” of Vladimir Putin’s Russia and “the hard place” of Donald Trump’s increasingly unpredictable US.Hill, 59, is perhaps the best known of the reviewers appointed by Labour, alongside Lord Robertson, a former Nato secretary general, and the retired general Sir Richard Barrons

1 day ago
A picture

Robert Jenrick is no kind of role model for Labour | Letters

Robert Jenrick isn’t diagnosing disorder. He’s manufacturing it (It’s easy to dismiss Robert Jenrick’s fare-dodging stunt. But he understands something Keir Starmer doesn’t, 30 May). The issue isn’t whether people are annoyed by fare-dodgers or spooked by barber shops that stay open late. It’s why that resentment gets more political airtime than landlords hiking rents, billionaires dodging taxes, or private equity firms bleeding the NHS dry

1 day ago
A picture

Without Yusuf, Farage will find it even harder to increase Reform’s popularity

At Reform UK’s conference last September, Nigel Farage could not have been more clear: his party had to “model ourselves on the Liberal Democrats” and painstakingly build an election-winning machine. This was always a tough ask and with Zia Yusuf gone it becomes harder still.At the time of the speech in Birmingham, Yusuf had been Reform’s chair for slightly over two months, and Farage was at pains to praise the millionaire entrepreneur for having “already made a massive difference to our level of professionalisation”.While the catalyst for Yusuf’s sudden resignation appears to have been his disquiet over some Reform MPs pushing to ban the burqa, there had long been rumours of tensions as the businessman tried to get an organisational grip on the party.Rightwing populists and political mavericks seem to be falling out regularly at the moment

1 day ago
A picture

‘Lots of bumps in the road’: Keir Starmer faces testing month before one-year milestone

As Keir Starmer approaches his first anniversary in Downing Street, there will be several things he wishes he had done differently. But before he can contemplate that July milestone, he faces a busy month strewn with political bear traps.June has proven a difficult time for successive prime ministers: Theresa May, Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak all had to contend with deeply unhappy parliamentary parties reeling from heavy local and European election losses.While the mood among Labour MPs is nowhere near as mutinous, they too are bruised from a difficult set of local election results in England in May and the surge of Reform UK. “There is more than the usual amount of grumbling and discontent,” a government source said

1 day ago
A picture

Tory proposal to leave ECHR would put peace in Northern Ireland at risk, Labour suggests – as it happened

Here is the full text of Kemi Badenoch’s speech this morning on the establishment of the party’s “lawfare commission” – the review that will consider the case for leaving the European convention on human rights.Labour has dismissed it as an attempt to appease Robert Jenrick and Reform UK, who are both unequivocally in favour of leaving the ECHR. During the Tory leadership contest last year Jenrick said the UK should definitely leave, while Badenoch said she was not ruling it out, but thought it was too simplistic to think leaving would just solve the problem. Some Tory leftwingers voted for Badenoch (who in other respects was more rightwing than Jenrick) just because of her stance on this issue. They regarded EHCR withdrawal as an unacceptable red line

1 day ago
A picture

Labour byelection win shows ‘SNP’s balloon has burst’, says Anas Sarwar

Scottish Labour’s surprise byelection win proves “the SNP’s balloon has burst”, a jubilant Anas Sarwar has said, after the popular local candidate, Davy Russell, defied predictions to beat the incumbent Scottish National party and fight off Reform UK’s “racist” campaigning in the central Scotland seat of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse.The Scottish Labour leader told a victory rally in Hamilton town centre on Friday morning that his party had proved everyone wrong following speculation that Reform UK might push it into third place, as the rightwing populist party gained ground in Scotland for the first time.“The reality is we proved the pollsters, the pundits, the political commentators and the bookies all wrong, and they are not understanding what is happening on the ground,” Sarwar said. “On the ground, people believe the SNP are done. The balloon has burst, people think they are a busted flush and they want them out

1 day ago
foodSee all
A picture

Rachel Roddy’s recipe for cornmeal and butter biscuits | A kitchen in Rome

3 days ago
A picture

How to turn mango pit and skin into fruit coulis – recipe | Waste not

3 days ago
A picture

Australian supermarket garlic bread taste test: ‘A vampire would burst into flames just smelling it’

4 days ago
A picture

Which dips are OK to buy, and which should I make? | Kitchen aide

4 days ago
A picture

Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spring meatballs with pasta and peas

5 days ago
A picture

Sweet, seedless citrus: Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for June

5 days ago