Shirozato to Shinju (White Sugar and Pearls)
13 June - 27 July 2025
Shirozato to Shinju (White Sugar and Pearls)
Elysha Rei
As a Nikkei Australian, a person of Japanese descent living in Australia, artist Elysha Rei references and reimagines Japanese-Australian histories. She feels compelled to create space for and to share these stories with new audiences and generations. In Shirozato to Shinju (White Sugar and Pearls), Rei brings important histories from North Queensland to the fore. For 12 years the first Japanese Consulate presided in Gurambilbarra / Townsville, marking Queensland's long history with Japanese-Australian relations. Nearly 4,000 Japanese migrant workers were drawn to this area for work across harvesting industries, including sugar cane, turtle, trochus, beche de mer, and pearling.
Rei has used archival records that document the Japanese migration and labour in these industries as the basis for hand-cut washi paper artworks. She depicts sugar cane, pearls, shells, and turtles gathered by early Japanese migrants in Queensland. The delicate, white forms contradict the harsh conditions these harvests were collected within. The installation is also an ironic gesture to the White Australia Policy, which inevitably restricted the Japanese population in Queensland, forcing the Townsville Consulate to close.
Also on display during this period
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408 Flinders Street,
Gurambilbarra (Townsville),
Qld, 4810 Australia
PO Box 2394,
Gurambilbarra (Townsville),
Qld, 4810 Australia
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Acknowledgement of Country
Umbrella Studio Contemporary Arts respectfully acknowledges the Wulgurukaba of Gurambilbarra and Yunbenun and the surrounding groups of our region - Bindal, Gugu Badhan, Nywaigi, Warrgamay, Bandjin and Gudjal - as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we gather, share and celebrate local creative practice. We pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging. We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders as the first people of Australia. They have never ceded sovereignty and remain strong in their enduring connection to land and Culture.
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Acknowledgements
Umbrella is supported by the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland, part of the Department of Communities, Housing and Digital Economy, and by the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy, an initiative of the Australian, state and territory governments. | Umbrella is supported by the Tim Fairfax Family Foundation and receives funding from Creative Australia through the Australian Cultural Fund. | Townsville City Council is a funding partner of Umbrella's program.