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Artworks
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:Photography courtesy of Joseph Burgess
Fernando do Campo
Hoop Pine (same as the floorboards), Acclimatisation Society of Queensland Gardens, 2024acrylic on canvas153 x 122 cmAUD 22,000.00Fernando do Campo is interested in the species that he encounters wherever he is and the histories they carry. Do Campo’s art practice oscillates between thinking with archives and thinking...Fernando do Campo is interested in the species that he encounters wherever he is and the histories they carry. Do Campo’s art practice oscillates between thinking with archives and thinking in the field, searching for ways of narrating non-human histories critically as a human. Lilac Hour is a body of work developed by do Campo across NSW, Queensland and Tasmania, specifically for MAF 2025 and focuses on the histories and presence of introduced flowering trees across temperate and subtropical Australia.
Trees have the capacity to thrive and become at home in locations where they may not naturally occur, arriving by wind, animal carrier, or human hand. As humans, we are aware of many introduced species around us, but the age and wisdom of trees and the fact we often can’t place their origins because we’ve encountered them across multiple locations before means we construct a relationship with them in a slightly different way to introduced animals. At the same time, encountering a specific tree species can teleport us to another time and place.
The series of paintings that make up Lilac Hour were developed while do Campo was being teleported across the global south by trees, as he was setting up a new studio in Brisbane and encountering new species which were often introduced from his first home of Latin America. Do Campo is fascinated by the complexity of such an encounter – the possibility that acknowledging a tree as a critical companion species in the trajectory of one’s day, learning about this companion, has the capacity to reveal colonial and environmental contradictions, personal and poetic pasts, and hopeful multispecies futures. Do Campo enjoys sharing that he makes paintings that document painting itself. There is a material process and a compositional process evident in his works, viewers think through making, while also asking questions about their own species historyExhibitions
Melbourne Art Fair, Gallery Sally Dan-Cuthbert, Melbourne Convention Centre, Melbourne, 20 - 23 February 2025