We acknowledge the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Art Gallery of NSW stands.

Title

Fruit bats

1991

Artist

Lin Onus

Australia

Dec 1948 – 24 Oct 1996

Language group: Yorta Yorta, Southern Riverine region

Artist profile

Alternate image of Fruit bats by Lin Onus
Alternate image of Fruit bats by Lin Onus
Alternate image of Fruit bats by Lin Onus
  • Details

    Places where the work was made
    Victoria Australia
    Melbourne Victoria Australia
    Date
    1991
    Media category
    Sculpture
    Materials used
    polychromed fibreglass sculptures, polychromed wooden disks, Hills Hoist clothesline
    Dimensions
    250.0 x 250.0 x 250.0 cm overall :

    a - 100 fruit bats, 41 x 14 x 8 cm, All bats vary in size, these measurements are those of an average sized bat.

    b - 603 polychromed wooden disks, 3 cm, diam.

    c - Hills Hoist clothesline, 250 x 230 x 230 cm

    Signature & date

    Not signed. Not dated.

    Credit
    Purchased 1993
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    395.1993.a-c
    Copyright
    © Estate of Lin Onus/Copyright Agency

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    Artist information
    Lin Onus

    Artist profile

    Works in the collection

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  • About

    Yorta Yorta painter, sculptor and activist, Lin Onus developed a distinctive visual language from a combination of traditional and contemporary Aboriginal imagery.

    Lin Onus was unjustly expelled from school on racist grounds at the age of 14, yet later attended university. He worked as a mechanic and spray painter, before managing his father's boomerang workshop in Melbourne. A self-taught artist, Onus forged a brilliant career and held exhibitions throughout the world.

    Onus's political commitment was inherent in his work. His Scottish mother was a member of the Communist Party, while his Aboriginal father, Bill, and uncle Eric were leading lights in the Aboriginal rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

    After a visit to Maningrida in 1986, Onus began his long and close association with the late Djinang artist, Djiwut 'Jack' Wunuwun and other central Arnhem Land artists, including John Bulunbulun. Onus then developed his signature style of incorporating photorealism with Indigenous imagery. It is a virtuoso effect, in which the landscape is overlaid with traditional Indigenous iconography, reflecting his strong ties with his father's community at Cummergunja Mission, on the Murray River. Onus's works from this period often have a riddling, Magritte-like quality. A memorable motif in his work is the breaking up of a seamless surface into jigsaw puzzle pieces – a metaphor for the sense of dislocation he felt, caught between black and white, urban and rural, worlds.

    In Onus's sculptures, irony, wit and whimsy are the predominant features. 'Fruit bats', 1991, is made up of a flock of fibreglass sculptures of bats decorated with rarrk (crosshatching), hanging on a Hills Hoist clothes line. Beneath this icon of Australian suburbia are wooden discs with flower-like motifs, representing the bat droppings. In this powerful installation, the sacred and the mundane combine. The work was inspired by Murrungun-Djinang imagery, which Onus was given permission to use. In 'Fruit bats', the artist shows a head-on collision between two contrasting sets of values, and throws in a few inversions of his own.

    The backyard – suburban Australia's haven of privacy – becomes spooked by the formidable presence of these noisy animals. The pre-colonial bats seem to have taken over and reclaimed their place, in a story worthy of Alfred Hitchcock.

    George Alexander in 'Tradition today: Indigenous art in Australia', Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2004

    © Art Gallery of New South Wales

  • Places

    Where the work was made

    Victoria, Melbourne

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 8 exhibitions

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 25 publications