Opening Ceremony II
Text by Ashleigh Jones-Fernandez
Eduardo Wolfe-Alegria interprets his memories and encounters through a lens of surrealism, drawing from tropes of mythology and fantasy to create imagery that is at once anthropomorphic, psychedelic and camp. “Opening Ceremony” is an installation that interprets the grasses and fields of Walbunja country or the Southern Tablelands where the artist lived for five years on a remote property.
Due to the weather phenomena of La Nina effecting most of Australia, this area endured increased rainfall and abnormal temperatures. It was during this time Wolfe-Alegria observed the fields near his property erupt with life, transforming what was normally dry grassland into a sea of psychedelic plants and colour. Some of the plants were introduced species or exotics, some native species like Australian orchids and lilies, as well hundreds of different types of fungi.
However, it was the influx of yellow dandelions that entranced Wolfe-Alegria and led to the creation of “Opening Ceremony”. Like a field of lemon drops, Wolfe-Alegria watched the bright petals of the dandelion unfurl each morning and hug itself closed at the end of its day. Seeing this enmasse allowed the artist to observe the dandelion’s beguiling rituals and ceremonial devotion to the sun; however, its unrelenting spread became a persistent reminder of the environmental imbalances it brings with it.
Though the dandelion is a sweet small flower, it is hard to ignore that such a weed can cause negative effects on Australia’s native flora, and its embodiment of colonial tropes and the Anthropocene. The dandelion is tough, persistent, and competitive, drinking much of the water its neighbouring plants need to survive. Its root systems grow deep and can withstand most extermination methods, and if a broken root remains, it will regrow with an unrelenting speed. Wolfe-Alegria’s dandelions tower in scale, dwarfing the foliage growing below. Their monstrous mouths gape with teeth like petals, exploring the dark undercurrents of the unassuming flower.
“Opening Ceremony” celebrates daily ritual and ceremony as a poetic reminder of the interconnectedness of life. Conversely, Wolfe-Alegria’s dandelions help us see how changes in our climate, such as La Nina, can affect and even sometimes encourage the survival of the incessant. Amplifying the inhospitable environment that introduced species inflict on native land.
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Marco Rinaldi
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, installation view, Passage Gallery, Sydney, 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Dimensions variable
Image credit: Document Photography
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #1), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
191 x 72 x 40cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #1, detail), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Approx. 45 x 15 x 15cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #2), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
181 x 70 x 56cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #2), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Approx. 35 x 45 x 35 cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #3), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
124 x 55 x 54cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #3, detail), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
Approx 45 x 55 x 40cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #4), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
103 x 47 x 65cm
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner
Opening Ceremony, (Flower #5), 2023
Wood, plaster, polymer, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, epoxy, aluminium, steel
59 x 90x 53
Image credit: Tanja Bruckner