| |
 |
|
|
The ways in which Aboriginal people have been portrayed by non-Aboriginal
people reflect Euro-centric values and have been largely negative.
Strong representations of Aboriginal people and society have developed
over time, often classifying individuals as "traditional Aborigines"
(those in remote areas), "contemporary Aborigines" (those in regional
towns or urban centres like Sydney), and at times more specifically
as "Aboriginal activists" (those who voice concerns about the treatment
of Aborigines). The politics of these stereotypes and their effects
on race relations in places like the city of Sydney began early
in the country’s post-invasion history.
One of the earliest European artists to portray
the lifestyle of the
Eora was known simply as the "Port Jackson Painter". His rich,
sympathetic portraits became well-known visual representations of
the people who once populated the area. His sketches often portrayed
the "natives" fishing and throwing spears with woomeras. Most of
the originals of these drawings are held in the Natural History
Museum in London. Some of the drawings originally attributed to
Governor John Hunter are now believed to have been the work of the
Port Jackson painter, recently identified as a midshipman named
Henry Brewer who arrived on the First Fleet. Another artist, convict
Thomas Watling, was more typical of his time, portraying the local
people in derogatory and negative ways.
|
|
Later artists of the 1830s such as Augustus
Earle, Charles Rodius and William H Fernybough focused more on portraits
of individual people like Bungaree
and Cora
Gooseberry. Often Aborigines were portrayed allegorically, as
symbols of a primitive state, with Sydney Town representing "civilisation"
taming a wild land.
|
 |
 |
Sydney
from the North Shore. In this 1827 watercolour, convicted forger Joseph
Lycett portrays traditional naked Aborigines in the foreground against
the background of progressive Sydney Town.
(DG SV1/13, Dixson Galleries,
State Library of New South Wales.) |
 |
By the 1890s, Sydney’s commercial photographers
such as Henry King and Charles Kerry regarded Aborigines as interesting
subjects, but the standards applied were not the same as those for
white people. Charles Kerry’s advertisements for his studio at 310
George Street included a bare-breasted Aboriginal woman titled ‘A
Princess Royal’. This sort of portrayal of Aboriginal women reflected
two attitudes to black women, one of them being exotic, but the
other accepting a double standard on the subject of nudity.
Some of Charles Kerry’s studio shots had Aboriginal
women posed suggestively with animal skins draped across their bodies.
The "female noble savage" was to appear sexually innocent, yet display
the promise of exotic performance. Such nude shots of Aboriginal
women showed the different conventions applying to them and to European
women, for similar photos of white women would have been considered
pornographic and socially unacceptable.
Aboriginal models in Kerry's photographs depicted
a generic race, rather than portraying people from particular regions
and nations with distinct cultures. The titles and poses of Kerry’s
subjects were generalised, with captions like ‘Aborigines Kindling
a Fire’, ‘Aborigines Camp’, ‘Group of Girls in European Dress’,
‘A Corroboree’, ‘An Aboriginal Fight’, ‘Aboriginal with Hunting
Weapons’. And many studio photos done in Sydney claimed to be of
Aboriginal warriors (‘Mary River Warrior’), princes (‘Prince of
Wales Island Native’) and natives (‘Gilbert River Native’) allegedly
from far away places. Some of Kerry’s studio shots use a tropical
island backdrop, reminiscent of somewhere in the Pacific. Such photographs
were very popular, and many were reprinted several times. A catalogue
of 12 post cards of these images was produced as a souvenir series
called the ‘Travelling Salesman’.
|
|
|
A
portrait by Henry King of an Aboriginal man ironically, and somewhat
offensively, labelled ‘The Dook’ because of his top hat and tails.
(Original photograph by Henry
King, Tyrrell Collection No 75/320, The Powerhouse Museum, Sydney)
|
 |
|
|
|
Aboriginal people were often represented as mysterious and intriguing
by white people in positions of power. They saw Aboriginal women
as objects, and treated them differently to Aboriginal men, viewing
them as "feminine delicacy". Such views of Aboriginal women often
reflected more about the European men themselves, than their chosen
subjects. The creation of such female images also shows the destructive
nature of colonisation when European art, made for a European audience,
perpetuated denigrating attitudes to Aboriginal women.
|
|
|
 |
A
posed but powerful portrait of a ‘Female Aborigine of N.S.Wales’ ,
showing the different standards applied to black and white women.
It may have been drawn by Francois Peron, an ethnologist with the
French expedition, commanded by Captain Nicholas Baudin, which visited
Sydney in 1802.
(GPO 1 – 06391, Government Printing
Office Collection, State Library of New South Wales.) |
|
|
|
Other nineteenth century images of Aborigines
have the "noble savage" male as strong, protective and active while
the young female sits submissively inside the hut, cradling her
infant. The Aboriginal men in Kerry’s photos were often posed in
positions of hunting, throwing boomerangs or fighting. Just as they
were often portrayed in colonial writing in a negative manner in
order to justify colonisation, so images of savage Aboriginal men
displaying brutality towards women and children helped to justify
their subjugation by the colonial powers.
|
|
|
A
studio photograph of an Aboriginal couple in their ‘traditional’ environment
with painted background scenery and bark humpy. The man displays his
latest hunting trophy, a kangaroo tail.
ONCY58-1 Mitchell Library, State
Library of New South Wales. |
 |
|
|
|