Nudity, Art, Sex and Death – Tasmania Awaits You
With one big bet, an art-loving professional gambler has made the Australian island into the world’s most surprising new cultural destination
- By Tony Perrottet
- Photographs by Joe Wigdahl
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2012, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
The interview had to wait as I parked the car, and we dashed into an old church that had been turned into an avant-garde performance space. Inside, a bohemian crowd was sitting on the darkened floor among dangerous-looking metal sculptures. A hush fell as we entered, and I heard people whispering, “There’s David Walsh.” We were joined on the floor by Walsh’s girlfriend, American artist Kirsha Kaechele, who began massaging his back and feet. We were then treated to an ambitious musical piece that featured discordant operatic singing accompanied by piano, cello and Brian Ritchie on the shakuhachi, a traditional Japanese bamboo flute.
I had no idea whether this marked the end of our meeting, but after the concert, Walsh suggested we head to a restaurant. He kept talking as he strode through traffic—topics included an esoteric account of how a scientific principle about electromagnetism called the Faraday Effect pertains to modern advertising—and kept up the intense pace after we took a table, continuing without pause for the next two hours. (I later learned that press portrayals of Walsh as a “recluse” receive snorts of derision from those who know him well. As one friend told me: “A dude who hangs out in bars every night of the week and will talk to anyone who approaches him is not reclusive.”)
With MONA’s high-tech gadgetry, whimsical flourishes and relentless hipster irony, the museum seems to challenge visitors not to take it seriously. But Walsh explained that before he commissioned its design, he toured Europe and the United States to refine his ideas. “The great repositories of Western civilization, such as the Metropolitan Museum in New York, are amazing, but you basically get what you expect,” he said. “There’s nothing that has the capacity to change you or who you are. MONA gives you no appropriate cues about what to expect, so there’s no mind-set we’re driving you into. I’m trying to give you the capacity to explore and engage individually.”
Walsh argues that his eclectic, personal approach harks back to the era of the Wunderkammer, or Cabinets of Wonders, which would be kept in the private houses of aristocrats from the Renaissance onward to reflect their own tastes. Fine artworks were displayed alongside religious relics, mythological marvels and natural history treasures such as gems, shells or fossils. “In the Wunderkammer, they wanted the mystery to be maintained,” he says. “Their unicorn horns didn’t have labels. They were just objects of wonder.” The cabinets fell out of favor after the popular revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries, and were replaced by grand national museums like the Louvre, which lay their exhibits out in orderly fashion. (Survivors of the cabinet spirit include Sir John Soane’s Museum in London and the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia. But there has also been a recent revival of interest in the approach, including the Museum of Hunting and Nature in Paris, “Le Cabinet de Curiosités” exhibit curated by Thierry Despont in New York last November and recent exhibits at the Venice Biennale. The Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles is another, although with an ironic, self-referential twist.)
“There is a sense where I’m trying to build an anti-museum,” Walsh summed up, “because I’m anti-certainty. I’m anti-the definitive history of the West. MONA is experiential. It’s not a product. It’s not a showcase. It’s a fairground.”
Such pronouncements make established curators’ skin crawl. One prominent New York expert refused to even be quoted in case it “validated” MONA’s approach, arguing that the unqualified combining of different period pieces is little more than an expression of a collector’s rampant ego. But other critics suggest that any shakeup of the museum world is not entirely a bad thing. “Much of contemporary art is not serious,” says Hobart-based critic Timms, “but most museums haven’t cottoned onto that yet. The art is given a reverence that isn’t really justified. It’s put up on a pedestal, and people object to that—they feel they are being conned. At MONA, art is entertainment, it’s cabaret, it’s theater. MONA is the world’s first no-bull art museum that says to people, ‘Don’t worry, have fun.’ I’m not sure that’s a good thing, or the sign of a healthy culture, but it’s honest!” He adds: “Of course, a concern is that the more serious artworks there could be trivialized.”
As for his collection, the emphasis on sex and death is natural, Walsh says, since “all art is motivated by the desire for one or the avoidance of the other. If you went to the Louvre, and explored the works that depicted sex or death, the percentage wouldn’t be any higher than at MONA. If you went into a church, the percentage that depicts death is vastly higher. Sex and death are not my theme. They’re the motives for artists, yes.”
Still, Walsh admits that he was surprised by the positive response to MONA: “I did expect a fundamentalist backlash.” Walsh’s friends say that the museum’s popularity has obliged him to revise his contrarian attitude. “David really built MONA so he could enjoy it himself,” says Brian Ritchie. “He didn’t think it would be embraced. In fact, he thought he would be reviled for it. I think he was even a little disappointed when he wasn’t! Now he’s moving into a different way of looking at it. He’s enjoying its success.”
Walsh could have built his museum anywhere, but he stayed in Tasmania, he says, partly because his two daughters from two marriages live there. But he also sees the island’s remoteness as an advantage: “When you travel to something, you’re invested in it more. If I’d built MONA in New York, I would have gotten a lot more visitors. But there’s too much background noise. The glib little jokes that MONA makes would have been lost in the clamor.” When pressed, he admits he wasn’t unaware that there might be a “MONA Effect” for Tasmania. Although statistics have yet to be gathered, he estimates that his museum added 120,000 visitor nights to Hobart in its first year, pumping $120 million into the beleaguered economy. (Walsh himself is losing $10 million a year, but he says he expects MONA to break even within five years.)
The most significant effect may be psychological. “I think it is changing how Tasmanians see themselves and their world,” says novelist Richard Flanagan. “It is liberating.” According to Peter Timms, “Tasmanians had a self-image problem. They had assumed, right from the beginning of their history, that important things happened elsewhere. But MONA makes people realize that what they do matters, and is admired by others.” The museum crops up in almost every conversation in Tasmania, and has become a prime topic in debates on how the island should manage its future. While the state government still subsidizes the mining and forestry industries, the traditional staples of the economy, conservation forces have been gaining strength ever since the world’s first political Green Party was founded in Tasmania in 1972. According to Hobart-based environmentalist (and Ritchie’s wife) Varuni Kulasekera, MONA proves that there are more viable and creative ways forward: “David is employing 200-plus people, and bringing thousands of tourists to Tasmania, who then fill hotels and restaurants, creating even more jobs,” she says. “There’s not a lot of spinoff activity from a wood-chipping plant.”
On my last night in Hobart, I went to another Walsh-commissioned theater production, a modern opera entitled The Barbarians that was performed almost entirely in Greek. I sat cross-legged on the floor in a packed theater, which was filled with smoke and pierced by lasers. A naked male dancer emerged from a water-filled trough and began gyrating feverishly to a shrill chorus, as synthesized music echoed through the air.
It was intense, but I expected nothing less. This was Tasmania, after all.
Australian-born, New York-based writer Tony Perrottet is the author of five books, most recently The Sinner’s Grand Tour. Photographer Joe Wigdahl lives in Sydney.
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Comments (12)
I just went to this museum on my recent visit to Australia, and it did not disappoint. It was innovative and exciting in so many ways I haven't seen before. To the lady with the traumatized 9-year-old, it's not Smithsonian's job to censor it's content, it's your job as a parent. The Smithsonian magazine is simply reflecting real life, portraying all sorts of aspects of real life around the world for it's readers. If you want to keep your child sheltered from life, then don't allow him to read this magazine before you've gone through it yourself, then guide your child on what articles he might not be ready for just yet. That's your job as a parent. That your child read this at all, and felt confronted by it, means that Smithsonian magazine was indeed doing it's job ..... enlightening their curious audience about interesting things around the world. This museum is not for children necessarily, depending on what exhibits they have, but I did see many in there when I visited. The naked exhibit mentioned in the article was only for a few months after they opened, and I'm pretty sure no parents took their kids to that, since the visitors had to be naked too. But there's certainly no harm in children knowing that exhibits like this exist ... just as they know many other things in the adult world are taboo to them. This knowledge is just part of life. Thanks Smithsonian! I would never have known about this fantastic museum if it wasn't for you.
Posted by Jane Yost on January 30,2013 | 07:36 PM
OMG, The Mother with the 9 year old doesn't see opportunity when it's hitting her in the face. What a wonderful way to introduce these subjects too the child. She could get on the computer and look threw the offerings. She could show how human body is interpreted thru art, describe the sexual experience in a fun and happy way. She could give her child a lot of positive insight if she had an little crack of openness in her own mind.The alternative is what? Try keep reality from your growing child? Get real! Teach him/her that sex is bad, shameful and scary? Describe death the same way? what kind of parenting is that? This is a beautiful and fascinating collection of ART. Walsh has done a service to the world, that includes you Momma. This is a good way for Mom too show her child that these realities are part of our life, they are perfect, beautiful and not scary. Does she think this child should grow into puberty not understanding reality? Be fearful and uninformed about what is part of living and the process of our lives! Grow up girlfriend. That beautiful child came from your own performance. Was that a bad thing? What here is not to be shared with a child? J'
Posted by on December 2,2012 | 11:53 AM
My 9 year-old, an avid reader, leafed through this copy of Smithsonian while swimming at his grandmothers house this afternoon, and came to me very disturbed by this article. We had a long talk about making choices about what we see and participate in (choose the best things in the world and avoid the garbage), but it is absolutely hideous for a reputable magazine like Smithsonian to tuck this article within its pages. He and I both trusted your magazine would be edifying and interesting... safe for children... and instead he was blindsided by incredibly offensive material. I'm surprised and very angry. Please, please REMEMBER YOUR AUDIENCE!!!
Posted by Amber on August 18,2012 | 12:20 AM
David Walsh and MONA sound like something right out of Nevada, USA's Black Rock Desert - an art festival that takes place there each year at the end of August called Burning Man. Wouldn't be surprised if Walsh has been before (and if he hasn't, he should go sometime - heck, he could take over the organization from what I can tell). Fascinating story - thank you. Makes me want to find out more about the history of Tasmania as well.
Posted by Joel Lippert on July 6,2012 | 02:30 AM
I'd just like to correct a mistake in the first paragraph. There was a community of Aboriginal people living outside the colonial settlement on the Bass Strait Islands, who have survived to this day. Therefore the Aborigines who were rounded up and moved to Flinders Island were some of the last, not the last. See: "The Aboriginal Tasmanians" by Lyndall Ryan for more info. It does no service to the Aboriginal community to write them out of existence. The description of "one of the most shameful chapters in British history" still stands.
Posted by Linda Seaborn on May 27,2012 | 04:00 AM
In that confidence. A red rose near a prominent stable, a white dream where the sound of that candle appears in the sky. Francesco Sinibaldi
Posted by Francesco Sinibaldi on May 12,2012 | 08:17 AM
I was born in Tasmania and feel very proud that MONA was developed there. Presently I live just out of Melbourne, just at the start of the Great Ocean Road, the most travelled tourist route in the World. I am a Member of the National Gallery of Victoria and visit other Australian galleries frequently! But, have not managed to get down to 'Tassie' as it is known here! The article, written by an Australian, I understand, paints an inviting picture. Despite the authors comments, and as much as I would like to visit, it is not considered mainstream here! I have visited NYC prior to 9/11 and had the pleasure of having a gin and tonic at Windows on the World at the now demolished World Trade Centre. Next day we flew Concorde to London!!!
Posted by Ronald Begg on May 8,2012 | 02:03 PM
What a great, fascinating, evocative piece! I love Tony Perottet's work - it's always interesting and so well-written!
Posted by sunbad on April 25,2012 | 01:44 AM
Great article. An insight into a unique character. I good friend of mine went to the MONA Launch. Said it was exquisitely bizarre. Have to get down there. The Festival is the time to go apparently.
Posted by Anthony J. Langford on April 24,2012 | 07:38 PM
Very entertaining article prompting tons of google searches!
Posted by Todd on April 22,2012 | 09:30 AM
I really enjoyed the article on Tasmania,especially about Mr. David Walsh. People who are visionaries, use their own funds too share what they love with their homeland is rare.Kudos to Mr. Walsh and Mr. Perrottet for their insight and foresight. ( Mr. Walsh and I have a lot in common, another time perhaps.)
Posted by DAN DESMOND on April 21,2012 | 01:44 PM
We lived in Melbourne, Australia about 10 years ago, and made a visit to Tasmania. It is a great place! I was surprised at the lovely city of Hobart, and all the things to see and do on the island. One of the places on the planet I would definitely live if I had my druthers.
Posted by K. Herschell on April 21,2012 | 12:35 PM