Yhonnie Scarce is an Australian glass artist whose work is held in major Australian galleries. She is a descendant of the Kokatha and Nukunu people of South Australia, and her art is informed by the effects of colonisation on Indigenous Australia, winning her the 2008 inaugural South Australian recipient of the Qantas Foundation Encouragement Award.
Scarce furthered her academic career by participating in a masterclass at North Lands Creative Glass Centre in Scotland. She received a Women in Research Fellowship from Monash University, undertaking a Masters of Fine Arts in 2008. she is on the staff of the Centre of Visual Art, Victorian College of the Arts.
Art works
Much of Scarce's glass work uses the murnong as a recurring motif. She has travelled through Germany, Poland, Ukraine, the former Yugoslavian states, Japan and the United States, looking at the design of monuments and memorials, in particular those related to nuclear trauma, genocide, massacres, rebellions and war. Weak in Colour but Strong in Blood was exhibited at the 19th Biennale of Sydney at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 2014. It featured glass yams alongside test tubes, arranged in a hospital-like setting. The work Thunder Raining Poison, which deals with British and Commonwealth government nuclear testing at Maralinga in South Australia, featured in Defying Empire, the 3rd National Indigenous Art Triennial at the National Gallery of Australia in 2017. Created from more than 2,000 hand-blown glass yams, it references the impact of the nuclear tests on local Aboriginal communities, between 1955 and 1963. Remember Royalty features glass yams along with glass bush plums, in cases in front of photographs of the artist's family. For the 2019 National Gallery of Victoria Architecture Commission, Scarce created In Absence, in conjunction with Edition Office Architectural Studio. Set in the Grollo Equiset Garden at the NGV, this nine-metre high by ten-metre wide cylinder is clad in a dark-stained Tasmanian hardwood, and lined with hundreds of glass yams. In preparation for her work at the 2020 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, In the Dead House, she examined the practices of "body-shoppers", who traded in whole or parts of dead bodies. The installation is mounted in the building formerly used as a morgue by the Adelaide Lunatic Asylum and later the Parkside Lunatic Asylum in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, now in the Adelaide Botanic Garden. Scottish physician William Ramsay Smith, who practised medicine at the Royal Adelaide Hospital in the early 1900s and used to sell body parts to international buyers, obtained some of his material from the morgue. Scarce also found that the practice of trading body parts continues today on the dark web, despite the advances in medical ethics, human rights and cultural heritage law and practices. The theme of the Biennial is monsters, and Smith is the monster represented in Scarce's exhibit. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Scarce had been spending some time at the University of Birmingham researching Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls, the scientists who worked on developing nuclear bomb technology. She is planning to return to this in order to develop another artwork as a follow-up to Thunder Raining Poison. Scarce works at the glass studio at JamFactory.
Collections
Scarce has work in the following collections:
Art Gallery of New South Wales: Death Zephyr
Art Gallery of South Australia: Burial ground ; What they wanted
National Gallery of Australia: Cultivation of Whiteness ; Silence part 1, part 2 ; Thunder Raining Poison ; Glass Bomb Series I, II, III
National Gallery Victoria:The Collected;Blood on the wattle ; Oppression, repression ''