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how are you today by the Manus Recording Project Collective

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:53 authored by James Parker, Joel SternJoel Stern
This essay is about how are you today, an artwork produced by six men then detained on Manus Island, along with their collaborators in Melbourne (together, the Manus Recording Project Collective). The work was commissioned in 2018 for an exhibition called Eavesdropping at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, at the University of Melbourne, the largest University-based museum in Australia. Each day for the fourteen weeks of the show, one of the men on Manus made a sound recording and sent it ‘onshore’ for swift upload to the gallery. By the exhibition’s end, there were eighty-four recordings in total, each ten minutes long. The result is an archive of fourteen hours—too large and diverse to synthesise, yet only a tiny fraction of the men’s indefinite internment. In this essay we introduce how are you today along with a series of reflections on it, including by two of the artists. We see our task as twofold. First, to document the work’s conception, production, and key realisations, both for the record and to spare the pieces that follow the trouble. Second, to offer a curatorial perspective in the process, since we were the ones who commissioned how are you today at the end of 2017.

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Journal

Law Text Culture

Volume

24

Number

1

Issue

1

Start page

9

End page

49

Total pages

41

Publisher

Legal Intersections Research Centre

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© Law Text Culture and contributors

Former Identifier

2006114020

Esploro creation date

2023-01-13

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