View textbook list A-Z

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

Pre-order our new design

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

Image caption appears here

THE SOUND OF THE SKY

In the Northern Territory, the weight of the earth is balanced by the impact of the sky. Here on the oldest continent, while the earth is firm, sound carries over vast distances and powerful forces are borne by the sky in the form of cyclones, meteors, lightning, dust storms, bombs and aircraft - phenomena which loom large in Territory experience and myth. Much has been written and spoken about the vastness of the sky in remote Australia: the differences in colour and shade the sun makes, the weighty presence of it, even the loudness of its silence. This book presents a visual record of Euro-Australian artists responses to the Northern Territory: its land and people and its resonating sky.In retrieving recognition for the significance of the Territory in Australian art, the book opens a window onto a hidden history that relays and reflects upon the transformative role of visual imagery in the process of cross-cultural exchangeAs the first comprehensive survey of visual responses to the Northern Territory by European artists over a period of two hundred years, The Sound of the Sky has the potential to make a significant contribution to understanding and knowledge about Australian art. Dr Sylvia Kleinert 2006Daena Murray has written a book against the times a history of the white (not black) art of the Northern Territory. But the way these artists have seen the Territory tells us a lot, not only about the original inhabitants of this country but those who came to displace them. The Territory has for a long time stood in for Australia itself, the frontier beyond which the real country supposedly begins. Murray analyses the idea of the Northern Territory as the 'last frontier' in fresh and surprising ways, in the end proposing the Territory as a place where reconciliation, or at least negotiation, between European and Aboriginal might be possible. In this, she truly does show how the Territory is, in her words, 'both the very old and the very new'.Dr Rex Butler 2006About the AuthorDaena Murray has been Curator of Visual Arts at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory for 13 years and has a 25-year research and publication history in Australian art and history. Her PhD thesis, The Northern Territory in Australian art is currently being examined.'a literary stylist of great beautyNicholas Rothwell, The Australian, 6 April 2006

Free shipping

We offer free postage in Australia four weeks before semester commencement up until census date or the take the option of click and collect with our extended trading hours.

Enter the code, SSAF in the discount code section of the checkout, for free postage.

Search our store

x