Savour Labour: The Brick Veneer Belvedere
2021, Cross Art Projects, Sydney.
2,557 overlapping 80 gsm monochromatic A4 photocopies (Laser Prints) on recycled A4 paper applied onto wall. Various artefacts from the Trades Hall Sydney. Soundscape by composer Louise Loh.
Savour Labour (The Brick Veneer Belvedere) 2021 was an immersive, multi-perspectival, spatial environment confabulated out of 2,557 overlapping 80 gsm monochromatic A4 photocopies (Laser Prints) on recycled paper. It was installed at Cross Arts Projects during April 2021 opening purposefully on May Day. It was on show until June 5, 2021. Savour Labour was developed in a dialogue with Sydney Trades Hall and Unions NSW focusing on the ephemera generated within the Labour Movement by individuals, principally volunteers who produced material for the 8 Hour Day marches and parades that were a regular feature of Australian cities and towns beginning in 1856 and continuing until the early 1970’s.
Unions NSW holds a nationally consequent collection of artefacts associated with their (ongoing) struggle better conditions for working people. In Sydney many of these including the sumptuous and celebrated banners produced by professional artists during the 19th and early 20th centuries are displayed in the 1888 heritage listed Sydney Trades Hall at 4-10 Goulburn Street. These have and continue to be the subject of many curated exhibitions and have been included in museum and gallery projects since the 1970’s. Savour Labour focused on the more modest and underexplored artefacts produced by non-professionals, anecdotally the family members of Unionist’s and used primarily as parade muster markers and as decorations worn by the horses who pulled the parade floats prior to the use of cars and trucks for this purpose.
To develop Savour Labour, we met regularly with Neale Towart and Bill Pirie volunteer archivists overseeing the Unions NSW collections. As the project developed, we selected various objects, discussing with Neale and Bill their provenance and other matters relating to their Object Biographies. We then reached out to Bundjalung, Kulilli and South Sea Islander man, sound artist and journalist Daniel Browning to contribute a suite of corresponding Subject biographies. Both the Object and Subject biographies were able to be accessed through QR codes within or appendaged to the cartouches that the selected artefacts were displayed within.
The secondary title – Brick Veneer Belvedere from the Italian for “beautiful view”, extends our exploration into building typologies particularly those with a close relationship to the garden. The garden we choose to explore in the context of savouring labouring was Berlin’s Teirgarten, focusing on vista’s visible from the spot where Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht were executed by right wing para-militarists in 1919.
We adapted our customary A4 grid based on parallel horizontal and vertical bands that closely resemble “Stack bond” brickwork into a staggered pattern resembling “Stretcher bond”, the most common bricklaying pattern in use. We then reached out to Favetti, a Sydney family business whose traditional bricklaying skill brought them international attention when their founder Peter Favetti came out of retirement to oversee the complex pattern of angle laid bricks for Frank Gehry’s Dr. Chau Chank Wing Building at the University of Technology, Sydney. The team at Favetti agreed to create a second Belvedere within our existing installation grid by designing a new façade. This was printed on differently coloured paper and applied over the top of our Brick Veneer Belvedere, visible but concurrently obscure. A ghost of something lost returned.
Savour Labour was accompanied by a soundscape from composer Louise Loh.