Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

the time-warping brilliance of Australian artist Julie Rrap

  • Written by Cherine Fahd, Associate Professor Visual Communication, University of Technology Sydney
the time-warping brilliance of Australian artist Julie Rrap

The first time I saw Julie Rrap’s artwork was also the first time I saw Julie. It was 1993 and I was a 19-year-old painting student at the College of Fine Arts in Paddington. Her self-portrait, Persona and Shadow: Puberty (1984), hung at the end of the corridor where I took art history classes. I used to look at the woman in that photograph and think that, despite performing a pose of feminine reserve, she was all-knowing and mighty.

I met the real Julie Rrap in 2012. By then, I was a 38-year-old photo-media artist teaching at Sydney College of the Arts. I thought, “Here is the mythic artist whose work had been a cornerstone of my artistic education, now an everyday colleague.” I told her about my first encounter with her work. She graciously giggled, having been told similar stories by many who had studied her work.

Julie Rrap, Persona and Shadow: Puberty, 1984. Image courtesy the artist and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney © the artist. x

In 2021, we travelled together to Canberra to see the nine images from Persona and Shadow on show at the National Gallery of Australia. On seeing the iconic photographs of Julie Rrap, by Julie Rrap, with Julie Rrap, I fully experienced the doubling and mirroring effects of her work.

This collision in time, with the artist and her body, is precisely what Rrap’s latest solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Past Continuous, contends with. It features her landmark 1982 installation Disclosures: A Photographic Construct, alongside new works – encapsulating more than four decades of exploration of the female body as a subject and object of art.

The nude comes to life

Disclosures (1982) was a pivotal piece in Rrap’s career. Comprising more than 70 photographs and self-portraits, it undermines the traditional voyeuristic gaze associated with the nude female body. The nude has come to life wearing a camera around her neck, acting as both the photographer and muse in a studio of her own. Rrap points the camera not only at herself but also at us, the viewers.

Julie Rrap, Disclosures: A Photographic Construct (detail), 1982, Museum of Contemporary Art, image courtesy and © the artist. Photograph by Cherine Fahd

This reversal creates a dialogue between the artist, the camera and the viewer, challenging the objectification of women in Western art. Rrap makes herself the nude, who is alive and writhing with her own creative agency.

The multichannel video work Drawn In (2024) is a companion piece to Disclosures created 42 years later. Rrap reinforces herself as a creator by energetically sketching around her nude body in charcoal – multiple GoPros replacing the older-style camera.

Julie Rrap, Drawn In, 2024, (detail), 3-channel digital video projection, 3-channel audio, phototex, image courtesy the artist, © the artist.

Seeing Disclosures in the context of this newer work highlights the consistency and depth of Rrap’s inquiry. It demonstrates all the ways we can never see ourselves from the perspective of others. No matter how many self-portraits we take, or how much we study our reflection, we get no closer to having an external objective view of ourselves. Rrap has always known how we appear is as changeable as the weather.

The artist and the artist in conversation

The new works in Past Continuous explore the transformation of the body through time. The video works Time Passing Through Me (2024) and Mirror Talk (2024) create a conversation between the artist’s younger and older selves.

In Mirror Talk, we see the faces of young Julie and older Julie glitching and morphing. We can hear a typewriter beat out the words from Sylvia Plath’s poem Mirror – becoming a language for young Julie, aged 31, to talk to her future self, aged 72. This poetic device issues an affecting tenderness from the present self to the past self and vice versa.

Julie Rrap, Mirror Talk (still, detail), 2024, 2-channel digital video animation, colour, sound, vinyl, image courtesy the artist; Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney; and ARC ONE Gallery, Melbourne © the artist.

At the centre of the exhibition is SOMOS (Standing On My Own Shoulders) (2023), a life-sized bronze sculpture of Rrap standing on her own shoulders. To see the body of a woman in her seventies cast in bronze is gloriously defiant and daringly unconventional.

It not only challenges traditional depictions of the classical female nude in Western art as being young and helpless, but also counteracts the cultural hierarchies that privilege the bronzed bodies of naked men above the bodies of older women.

Julie Rrap, SOMOS (Standing On My Own Shoulders), 2024, bronze, image courtesy the artist and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney © the artist, photograph: David Suyasa.

The body as a site of enquiry

In her 70s, Rrap’s decision to continue to bring her own body into view is deliberate and without vanity. There is no softening of the edges or raising of the flesh – and no attempt to erase the marks of time. She stands before us as she is, in her complexity. This is not a body that has been idealised or romanticised. It is real, lived-in, strong and vulnerable at the same time.

Julie Rrap, featuring: Disclosures: A Photographic Construct (detail), 1982, installation view, Julie Rrap: Past Continuous, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, 2024, image courtesy the artist and Museum of Contemporary Art Australia © the artist, photograph: Zan Wimberley.

There is defiance in this – a refusal to hide or diminish the reality of a finite human existence. As a young female artist in the late 1990s and a middle-aged artist today, I find Rrap’s use of her own body in her work profoundly liberating. It is an invitation to see my own body not just as a failing object but as an ongoing, changeable medium of artistic and political expression.

Standing in front of SOMOS, I am reminded of the conversations we have with ourselves and the ways we shape and reshape our identities over time. Rrap’s work is a testament to this ongoing process of becoming. It is an invitation to see ourselves not just as we are, but as we have been and as we will be. It is a celebration of the process of self-transformation. And for that I am deeply grateful.

Julie Rrap: Past Continuous is at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, until February 16 2025.

Julie Rrap, foreground: SOMOS (Standing On My Own Shoulders), 2024, bronze, Art Gallery of Western Australia Collection, purchased 2024; background: Drawn In (detail). 2024, 3-channel digital video projection, 3-channel audio, phototex; installation view, Julie Rrap: Past Continuous, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, 2024, image courtesy the artist and Museum of Contemporary Art Australia © the artist, photograph: Zan Wimberley.

Authors: Cherine Fahd, Associate Professor Visual Communication, University of Technology Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/not-just-as-we-are-but-as-we-have-been-and-as-we-will-be-the-time-warping-brilliance-of-australian-artist-julie-rrap-233094

Affordable Invisalign in Bangkok Why Australians Are Choosing Thailand

More Australians are investing in Invisalign to straighten their teeth, but the treatment in Australia can cost thousands of dollars and often takes m...

Designing a Tranquil Oasis in Your Backyard

Nothing beats a warm summer evening spent in a gorgeous backyard. The backyard is the perfect space to unwind and spend some of the most magical momen...

How a Well-Designed Gym Can Improve Your Performance

Have you ever entered a gym that just feels off and couldn’t focus on your workout? Maybe it’s the layout that was weird, or the lack of natural l...

Wellness Checkups at Work: Key to Employee Happiness and Higher Output

Employee wellness programs are reshaping how companies think about productivity and satisfaction. When people feel healthy, they perform better, sta...

Experience the Elegance of Plantation Shutter Blinds: Enhance Your Décor Today

When it comes to elevating your home’s interior, few window treatments combine sophistication and practicality as effortlessly as plantation shutter...

Common Questions Women Are Afraid to Ask Their Gynaecologist (and Honest Answers)

Visiting your gynaecologist isn’t always easy. Even though reproductive and sexual health are essential parts of overall wellbeing, many women fee...

Designing Homes for Coastal Climates – How to Handle Salt, Humidity, and Strong Winds in Building Materials

Living by the ocean is a dream for many Australians, offering breathtaking views, refreshing sea breezes, and a relaxed lifestyle that’s hard to b...

This OT Week, Australia’s occupational therapists are done staying quiet

Occupational Therapy Week is typically a time to celebrate the difference occupational therapists make in people’s lives. But this year, many sa...

Melbourne EMDR Clinic Sees Growing Interest in Patients with Depression

Depression is a common mental health condition affecting around 1 in 7 Australians. It is typically diagnosed when an individual has experienced a p...

Proactive approaches to mental wellbeing

Life gets busy quickly. For many adults, each week is a constant mix of work commitments, raising kids, managing a household, settling bills, catching...

The Power of Giving Back: How Volunteering Shapes Your Mindset

To say the least, volunteering can maximally change the way you see the world. Period. When you step into someone else’s shoes, even for a few hours...

How to Level Up Your Workouts with Simple Home Equipment

Working out at home has reached the peak of its popularity. Whether you’re short on time or simply prefer the comfort of your own space, home traini...

How to Prepare Financially for Buying a Home

Buying a house is one of the biggest and most exciting money choices you'll ever make. It means you stop giving rent money to someone else and start b...

Why Choosing Local Lawyers in Brisbane Can Make All the Difference

When it comes to legal matters, your choice of representation can influence both the outcome and overall experience. Working with local lawyers in B...

Restoring Volume and Style with Human Hair Toppers for Women

Hair plays a significant role in confidence and self-expression, but thinning hair and hair loss can affect women at any stage of life. While wigs p...

Top Qualities of a Trusted Local Aircon Installer

Choosing the right air conditioning installer can make a big difference to your comfort, safety, and long-term energy costs. A properly installed syst...

Everything You Should Know About Double Chin Treatment

A double chin, medically known as submental fat, is a common concern that affects people of all ages and body types. Thanks to modern cosmetic proce...

The Modern Role of a Dentist in Oral and Overall Health

When most people think of a dentist, they imagine routine check-ups, cleanings, or cavity fillings. While these remain vital aspects of dental care...