Of circuses, sideshows and high-wire feats A Dickensian Sideshow â exhibition by Karla Dickens, Lismore Regional Gallery (Nov 2020 - Feb 2021, touring to Orange Regional Gallery in Nov 2021)
Karla Dickens. Photo Mick Richards.
Aboriginal people were familiar faces in the circuses and carnival shows that toured Australian in the 20th century, crucial to the set-up and take-down work, the operating of sideshow alleys and the boxing tents run by the legendary Jimmy âWhoâll take a glove?â Sharman. None, however, was more famous than Lismore-born Cornelius Sullivan, with an Irish father and part-Bundjalung mother, who went on to become one of the most famous circus performers in the world under the name âCon Colleanoâ. Posing as a Spaniard because being Aboriginal wasnât saleable, he dressed like a matador and delighted audiences in Australian the USA and Europe for a high-wire balancing act that included full somersaults and removing his flowing cape in mid-air. Highly paid by Ringlings and Barnum & Bailey, at one time he was considered a potential replacement for Rudolph Valentino after the silent film star died. He preferred the high wire and the gasps of live audiences. Conâs remarkable agility â drawing gasps from gallery visitors featured in newsreel footage about âThe Toreador of the Wireâ that screened as part of Karla Dickensâ celebration of the Indigenous people who boxed, ran sideshow attractions and helped keep all
these community shows on the road. Dickens, a woman of Wiradjuri descent now living locally, assembled, combined and modified âfound objectsâ collected over years as part of her art practice. They comprise an astounding grab-bag of memorabilia, from old sideshow signage â âWin a Tweety for your Sweetyâ, and the Laughing Mouse Game: Every child player receives a prize â as well as original constructions. The exhibition is vast, intricate to the point of overwhelming, and as might be expected, highly charged with comments on the racism that infected Aboriginal participation in popular culture, not least the kind that made âCon Colleanoâ pretend to be Spanish, and sometimes even from the Hawaiian royal family. Of course, he had the last laugh, and the income to prove it.
troupeâs tent, souvenired by renowned painter and sometime boxer, the late Digby Moran. This strikingly original and deceptively challenging show contains a host of visual surprises as well as messages both subtle and blunt, the latter epitomised by the pig sculpture dubbed âLawless Piggyâ that wears a NSW Police hat and bears the caption âWarn a brotherâ. The full exhibition and descriptions of the works come in a handsome 80-page book available for $30.00 through the Lismore Art Gallery or (02) 6627 4600.
One standout was a grotesque collage of masks, perhaps from a ghost train, bearing the caption, âTrue horror is Australiaâs history of massacring its first peopleâ. The artistâs found objects are immensely diverse, from advertising posters and sideshow games such as lucky envelopes and ping-pong balls, to boxing gloves and a spruikerâs drum from the Sharman
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