Cosmic Echoes
Virtual exhibition
Cosmic Echoes: a Shared Sky Indigenous Art Exhibition is a celebration of humanity’s ancient cultural wisdom and how it relates to modern science. It stems from a vision by the SKAO and its partners, the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory (SARAO) and CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency, to bring together Indigenous artists living and working close to the SKA telescope sites.
Learn more about the exhibition here, and scroll down to explore the artworks.
The Cosmic Echoes: Shared Sky Indigenous Art Exhibition is an SKAO initiative, in collaboration with SARAO, CSIRO and the Wajarri Yamaji Aboriginal Corporation. The SKAO recognises and acknowledges the Indigenous peoples and cultures that have traditionally lived on the lands on which their facilities are located. In Australia, the SKAO and CSIRO acknowledge the Wajarri Yamaji as Traditional Owners and Native Title Holders of Inyarrimanha Ilgari Bundara, the CSIRO Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, the site where the SKA-Low telescope is being built.
The Stars Say Tsau
For Indigenous people all of creation has a spiritual essence and the stars have governed our behaviour since ancient times. We have always looked up to the sky to know when to hunt, when to sow, when to harvest and how to be aligned with the seasons. The Universe speaks in a soft language that the Ancients understood. The heart of the artist perceives the echoes of the softness and shares it with the world. And, elsewhere on the landscape of understanding, scientists unravel the very same messages.
The Raw Essence - Pierre Cloete
8 x Mono Prints
Acrylic on Paper - 42 x 60 cm
Who Am I
Caught between the earth and sky
Our Ancestors believed that to walk the earth with no mind to the sky we could survive but never thrive. To cross the borders from our place to theirs, we bring the outside inside, listen to the animals and heed the timeless rituals. The language of the stars is echoed in everything on earth.
We must walk the Sky for we are heaven’s things.
Terence Visagie & Youth Artists - Crossing Oceans Inside
The Northern Cape Youth Participants in the project developed individual compositions using sand, rocks, fynbos (indigenous flora) and paper cutouts to create engaging compositions that were photographed. Bringing the outside inside. Rocks become planets and sand morphs into cosmic dust. We use elements from earth to show our connection to the heavens and to honour the way our Ancestors guide us towards a brighter future.
Youth artists: Brayton Vyver, Cherman Dollies, Je-dewaan Jann, Shirdio Saaiman and Tylor Mouers
Echoes of Kinship
The Eland moves through the wild with the wisdom of the ages. The stride of the Emu is a dance of resilience and it walks among the stars. //Kaggen The Mantis is a master of stillness.
The Ostrich embraces the paradox of wings that cannot fly. In Indigenous folklore the animals teach, they inspire and they have equal agency over the earth. In the night sky we see the echoes of our connection to the earth and its creatures.
In Southern Africa mythology the Seven Sisters, also known as the Pleiades, marks the start of the ploughing season. The cluster is seen by some as a group of elders telling stories around the fireside or women fleeing an angry hunter, just as it is in Australia. Another story says it is a bag of ostrich eggs, left behind by an angry hunter who failed to shoot a zebra. His wife forbade him to return home empty handed and so his discarded arrow and the seven eggs remain in the sky. Winter is coming when the Seven Sisters are low on the horizon and just before these stars disappear from the Southern skies. When Pleiades returns it is time to prepare the fields.
Among the Hessequa people of the Khoekhoe First Nations there is story of how mothers would take their newborn babies to a high place and lift them up to meet the Seven Sisters when it reappeared. There was dancing and singing and prayers for a bountiful season.
Descendants Of An Ancient Star
The Great Star !Gaunu falls in love with a young flower and asks his Sister, one of the most beautiful of all the flowers in the heavens for assistance. The flower that he loves will not open. His sister comes to his aid and the young flower blooms. The Great Star !Gaunu is so happy he begins to sing. He urges his sister to sing along with him. As they sing, flowers of unparalleled beauty open on the earth, one by one. In the realm below, the /Xam women take up his song and the veldkos (bush tucker) ripens. And so it is that every year the Great Star !Gaunu, his beloved and his sister sing the opening of the flowers with a love song. The veld comes alive with blossoms and food that cannot be found anywhere else on earth.
We are the leaves and branches of an Ancient Tree, itself descended from the Sky Mother, the Moon Father and their Star
Children. The leaves, the tree and the heavens all bound together by love.
Cotton Eggs and Pears
The |Xau of Now
In the extinct /Xam language of the Bushman people, |XAU means to go on a magical expedition or shoot with a magical arrow. In international trading, XAU is also the currency symbol for gold. Tumbling around in the maelstrom of the modern world, in search of what we have lost, we need to find those magical arrows. We need to find The |Xau of Now to restore our relationship with the earth and sky and the divine within. Only then will we begin to heal what has been destroyed without and within.
Cosmic Sisterhood
The Feminine Divine is a prominent aspect of ancient spirituality worldwide. Women are seen as central figures in the spiritual and natural order. These female artists tap into the essence of star stories.
Credits
Sylvia Vollenhoven Curator | Filmmaker | Arts Workshop Facilitator
Lukretia Booysen Indigenous Curator
Terence Visagie Featured Artist | Arts Workshop Facilitator
Basil Appollis Director | Arts Workshop Facilitator
Australian artists
Carlleen Dingo Noeleen Hamlett
Mauretta Drage Vanessa Kelly
Godfrena Gilla Leeann Kelly-Pedersen
Dawn Hamlett Susan Merry
Gail Rose Simpson
South African artists
Pierre Cloete Junior Oliphant
Garth Erasmus Hendreas Vaalbooi
Northern Cape youth
Breyton Dakens Alishé Malgas
Cherman Dollies Ashwaan Moolman
Je-Dewaan Jann Tylor Mouers
Jonbernay Kampher Shirdio Saaiman
Katelin Kiewido Chevarney Tieties
Jadenique Kordom Brayton Vyver
Neydrian Majiedt
Acknowledgement
William Garnier SKAO
Letebele Masemola-Jones SKAO
Liz Williams SKAO
Kirsten Fredericksen CSIRO
Chris Malcolm Shared Sky Curator
Jennylyn Hamlett Wajarri Yamaji Aboriginal Corporation
Anton Binneman SARAO