Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 22 May

By May 22, 2024No Comments

You Can Go Now! (Behrendt, 2022)

Last week I men­tioned to sub­scribers that I was hop­ing to open up one column a week to requests or recom­mend­a­tions from readers.

I’ve received a few but some of them – TV series mainly – require quite a com­mit­ment. They’re going into the mix, though, and I’ll get to them eventually.

Today’s recom­mend­a­tion actu­ally came from read­ers a few months ago – found­a­tion sub­scribers ELS and BS of Tawa in Wellington – but it has taken me a while to get around to it. So very glad I did.

Richard Bell is an abori­gin­al artist – he describes him­self as an act­iv­ist mas­quer­ad­ing as an artist – whose work is designed to con­front and chal­lenge the pre­dom­in­ately white Australian art and polit­ic­al estab­lish­ments, a chal­lenge that he meets head on.

Born in rur­al Queensland in 1953, Bell’s polit­ic­al awaken­ing came at the age of 14 when the gov­ern­ment bull­dozed the tin shack he lived in with his moth­er and broth­er and moved them into a con­demned build­ing in town that had to be declared ‘un-condemned’ for the purpose.

In 1967 the Australian gov­ern­ment con­duc­ted a ref­er­en­dum in which white Australians could decide wheth­er Aboriginals should actu­ally be con­sidered people or not. 91% of the pub­lic gra­ciously voted ‘yes’ and it was hoped that the res­ult might mean some change in the eco­nom­ic and social situ­ation so many indi­gen­ous Australians found them­selves in.

Fat chance. In fact what sup­port that had pre­vi­ously been avail­able was with­drawn and thou­sands of young Aboriginal people moved from rur­al Australia to cit­ies where they might find work.

In places like cent­ral Sydney sub­urb Redfern – I say ‘like Redfern’ but I’m not sure there were many equi­val­ents – young Aboriginal people were inspired by the civil rights move­ment in the US to become rad­ic­al­ised and start protest­ing the plight of their people. Bell was one of them.

The doc­u­ment­ary You Can Go Now! is a por­trait of a man who turned the com­bin­a­tion of a power­ful sense of injustice, con­sid­er­able per­son­al hard­ship and a tre­mend­ous sense of humour, into an inter­na­tion­al art career. An early scene in the film shows him on a launch at the 2019 Venice Biennale, fol­low­ing a scale mod­el of the Australian pavil­ion that he has stuck on a barge and wrapped in chains.

He pitched that idea to be the offi­cial Australian exhib­it but was turned down, so he decided to gate­crash the event and do it anyway.

But the film isn’t just about Bell, the artist. It’s also a pot­ted his­tory of late-20th cen­tury Australian race rela­tions and a guide to how – in the third dec­ade of the 21st cen­tury – pub­lic acknow­ledge­ments of colo­ni­al crimes are now com­mon­place and what had to hap­pen to achieve that.

One of the iron­ies I thought about while watch­ing the film is that Bell is almost the per­fect ste­reo­type of an Australian. He’s an icon­o­clast, a lar­rikin, anti-authoritarian – everything that Australia thinks of as its own nation­al char­ac­ter. Except for the col­our of his skin.

It’s a rich film, full of ideas, and – for those of us who grew up out­side Australia – there’s lots to chew on, not least the tales of the appro­pri­ation and eco­nom­ic exploit­a­tion of Aboriginal art by the Australian estab­lish­ment. Hundreds of mil­lions of dol­lars of inter­na­tion­al rev­en­ue. Where did it all go? Not into mak­ing Aboriginal artists mil­lion­aires, that’s for sure.


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Where to watch You Can Go Now!

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on DocPlay

Australia: Streaming on DocPlay (Subs) or SBS On Demand (Free with ads)

Rest of the world: Currently unavailable