Steaphan Paton Cloaked Combat #3 (left) 2013, single-channel HDV; Yours Faithfully the Sheriff, The Magistrate, The Officer in Charge (right) (all 2016, paper, archival glue, oil pastel and synthetic polymer paint on canvas. Installation view, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne. Courtesy the artist and Station, Melbourne. Photograph: Andrew Curtis
Steaphan Paton is a Melbourne-based artist and member of the Gunai and Monero nations. Through much of his work he examines the tension between his sovereignty as an Indigenous person and contemporary mechanisms of colonial authority. Paton is a multidisciplinary artist who has worked in drawing, painting, sculpture, video, virtual reality and public art installations, and often draws on his connection to his Country when creating artworks. Paton is concerned with the continuation of the cultural practices specific to his traditional lands, and for this reason he uses his people’s languages, stories and designs to engage the culture of his Country.
This artwork consists of an installation of three sculptural cloaks and one large-scale video projection. Each cloak is made from green canvas commonly used for tents, swags and tarpaulins – all items used to occupy unfamiliar territory. Each cloak is reversible, painted on one side with a traditional Gunai and Monero geometric design, and on the other side sewn with official documents including infringements, parking fines and letters sent by various authorities addressed to the artist. The form of the cloaks is derived from the traditional cloaks made by Paton’s people. By placing his peoples’ designs on one side, and documents of colonial authorities on the other, Paton has created objects that capture the tension between the two systems of land tenure. When someone gets a parking fine it is issued by an authority, usually the local council, who claims sole control and ownership of the land where a carpark is located. Paton’s work focuses on parking fines as an everyday example of how colonial authorities police land, and raises questions about the rightfulness of ownership.
Paton’s video is shot on Gunai Country, also known as Gippsland, and shows the artist wearing camouflage and shooting modern arrows into traditional bark shields that the artist made himself. Paton is combining an Indigenous cultural practice, the shield, with a contemporary colonial technology, the bow and arrow. This juxtaposition of ancient Indigenous and new colonial technologies is key to this work. The high-tech arrows easily pierce the bark shields that are designed to defend the holder from hand thrown spears. Together these artworks are an allegory for the complex nature of Indigenous peoples’ connection to Country within contemporary times, specifically with regard to contested ownership and the violence of Indigenous dispossession.