Issue 47

Bonita Ely:
Future Tense

A timely survey exhibition at Griffith University Art Museum brings together two major works by Australian artist Bonita Ely, documenting darkly humorous dystopian futures wrought by environmental degradation and genetic engineering.

We Live to be Surprised (1989/2019) is Ely's latest iteration of �snabbits' � half snail/half rabbits. Engineered as a food source for an overpopulated planet by a futuristic agribusiness regime, these initially benign creatures have evolved into a feral monoculture, peeking out from the rubble of redundant technologies. Shown in Australia for the first time since its debut at documenta 14 in 2017, Ely's installation Plastikus Progressus (2017�19) parodies natural history dioramas. Set in 2054, it details the extraordinary taxonomies of creatures genetically engineered to consume plastic and, in the process, clean up our mess in the streets, oceans and rivers. The installation includes a new section examining the plastic pollution of the Brisbane River.

With her characteristic wry satire, Ely's works imagine an impossible future when nature has adapted with the assistance of science, and flourished despite the devastating effects of plastic pollution and human-induced climate change. Bonita Ely: Future Tense runs until February 8, 2020.

griffith.edu.au/art-museum

MCA Roslyn Oxley Gallery IMALENNOX STACMIACCA Melbourne
Issue 47