Victoria’s Peninsula Link will be home to a new $300,000 sculpture, with Australian artist Natasha Johns-Messenger unveiled as the latest recipient of the Southern Way McClelland Sculpture Commission.
Since 2013 the commission has seen large-scale works installed along two sites on the Peninsula Link highway near Mornington. Specific details of her project by her, titled compass 23are under tight wraps but Johns-Messenger told The Age how she always draws inspiration from where her artworks will be installed.
“I was thinking about how once upon a time we had navigational forces like the stars,” said the artist. “Now we’ve got our phones… I think people rely so much on the virtual that we don’t really know which way north is half the time. ”
As can be gauged from its title, compass 23 is interested in direction and the work will reflect its location by the Cranbourne Road exit ramp with curved forms echoing the freeway itself.
“I’m not supposed to reveal exactly what it is, but to give you a taster it’s a subtle line drawing intervention in space, using the sky as a voluminous form,” she said.
Johns-Messenger’s works have been exhibited around the world, including at Netherlands’ Escher in Het Paleis, the Australian Center for Contemporary Art and La Biennale di Venezia. This is her largest single structure to date, and its location brought about its own challenges. “You have to think about the audience hurling through space, essentially, instead of in a gallery where they can contemplate and look in a very different way.”