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Wes Hill in conversation with Andrew Harper

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Wes Hill: What is it like to be a contemporary artist based in Hobart? Do you think that Tasmanian artists are generally well-represented in exhibitions and dis­course produced on the Australian mainland?

Andrew Harper: No, not really. But why should we be? I actually feel a bit uncomfortable speaking for Tas­mania because the reasons I make a work and how I go about it are so personal.

Having said that, there is a sense of place in some of my work; Celluloid Curse Against the Current Government (2005) was very much about being in Hobart and being near Mount Wellington for the project’s final performance. But generally I don’t make work about place, though there is a bit of it about in Tasmania. It is interesting that you can feel so dwarfed by nature here. It’s so big. I was told once of a visiting artist from mainland Australia who found Mount Wellington to be an oppressive presence in Hobart. I thought that was hilarious. I understood this as a reaction to the immensity of nature—being humbled by it and not liking that feeling. I actually like the sensation of being dwarfed by nature here. I don’t see it as a bad thing.

Wes Hill: You once walked from Launceston to Hobart as an artwork, didn’t you?

Andrew Harper: Yeah, that was a weird one. I’d had the idea of going for a really long walk for some time. I think about a lot when I walk. I’m also into psychogeography and cognitive mapping. Walking became difficult for me after I broke my ankle badly in 2002. This was terrible because I don’t drive and I like... The rest of this article is available to subscribers of Eyeline

A Thousand Pardons, 2007. Video still. Contemporary Art Spaces Tasmania (CAST), Hobart.

A Thousand Pardons, 2007. Video still. Contemporary Art Spaces Tasmania (CAST), Hobart.

Acrid, 2009. Performance still with PISS(light), 2007, film projected onto the artist. Performed at 6A Gallery, Hobart.

Acrid, 2009. Performance still with PISS(light), 2007, film projected onto the artist. Performed at 6A Gallery, Hobart.