Gander
Shown at Sydney Contemporary with MARS Gallery, September 2026. For artwork enquiries contact MARS Gallery.
A porcelain doll #2, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 30 x 40.5cm
Scottish Agate bangle, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 40.5cm x 50.5cm
Scrimshaw , 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Records of enslaved people, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 20 x 25cm
A Winslow Homer from a fly tip, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 30.5 x 40.6cm
Diamond brooch, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 50.5 x 40.5cm
Raoul Dufy, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 12.5 x 17.5cm
A porcelain doll #1, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 40.5 x 30cm
Battle of Britain pilot mask and helmet, 2025 oil on board, triptych, framed in Tasmanian oak 50.5 x 121.5 cm
Kinora, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Photo album, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 20 x 25.5cm
A porcelain doll #3, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 25.5 x 20cm
Mahogany plate bucket, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 40.5 x 30.5cm
Trio of toys #2, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Ceramic vase, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 30.5 x 40.5cm
Stanley Cursiter painting, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 40.5 x 30.5cm
Diamond and ruby snail shell, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 61 x 45.5cm
Claret jugs, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Cycling competition badges, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Mahogany side table, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 12.5cm
Grandma's jewellery box, 2025 oil on board, diptych, framed in Tasmanian oak 17.5 x 25cm
Trio of toys #1, 2025 oil on board, framed in Tasmanian oak 61 x 45.5cm
Gander extends Miranda Hine's interest and research into practices of preserving and assigning value to material culture. The new series of paintings presents crowd scenes from Antiques Roadshow, the long-running British television programme that presents a strange crossroads of cultural, historical, personal, private, public, sentimental and monetary valuation.
Hine distorts and frames through the painting process, pushing the already constructed composition and quality of the TV scenes. Ambiguous and with only small hints as to their original context, the images could be references to nostalgic family photographs or archival images from history. Who are these people? Why are they congregating and what are they looking at? Completing the spectacle, in Gander the onlookers themselves become the subject.
The series builds on Hine's critical fascination with formulaic British narrative formats including 'cosy' TV, and the comfort and familiarity these seem to offer Australian audiences.