Can’t do without you (2021)

A photographic response to the pandemic. Commissioned by the Museum of Australian Photography.

Each of us built a set of the room we spent most of our lockdown time in. The objects and furniture which served as our predominant landscape became so hauntingly familiar. We constructed these miniatures from memory rather than our usual fastidious studying and measuring, limiting ourselves to materials we already had. 

Each of these spaces is also the place from which we looked out into the rest of the world. As an artistic duo with an animation practice and a shared studio we are used to spending large amounts of time in the same room. These two spaces were all we saw of each other’s lives for most of the year.

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Exhibition
26 June – 29 August 2021 as part of STAGES: A photographic response to the pandemic, Museum of Australian Photography (formerly Monash Gallery of Art), Victoria

21 May – 17 July 2022 as part of Take me with you.
The Riddoch Arts & Culture Centre, Mt Gambier, South Australia

View the original exhibition microsite.


Large Photographs

Installation views

Wall text

Isobel Knowles and Van Sowerwine’s practice blends three-dimensional miniatures, photography and animation in unique and emotionally charged, surreal environments. Their commissioned work delves into the psychological impact of lockdown in Melbourne. Knowles and Sowerwine each created miniature versions of the rooms in which they spent the bulk of lockdown. These sculptures are filled with personal items found in makeshift live-work-play spaces, evoking memories of our collective confinement, where the boundaries between work and home lives had to blur. Through these works, Knowles and Sowerwine reflect upon the dislocation they felt when separated from each other.

‘As collaborative artists we normally spend time in the same physical space to create work, experiencing the room, the energy and the interruptions together in one space. During the pandemic we were forced apart, our screen-based connection becoming our only window with which to access each other's workspaces and life beyond 5km.

Simultaneously we became deeply embedded within our immediate physical environments with every detail of every item etched into our minds, like familiar landmarks. For this commission we rebuilt these rooms from memory, without our usual precise measuring and referencing of the furniture or objects, re-constructing our interior psychological spaces in miniature. These miniature works and the subsequent photographs of our imagined selves in these spaces serve as a personal memorial or time-capsule of a year where the entire world shifted.

The miniatures created for the commission are embedded into the gallery wall and can be peered into and through towards the photographic installation behind. This installation  reflects the artists' separation, the constraint on their collaborative practice and their differing emotional and physical experiences during lockdown.

In her nomination Gael Newton AM commented that ‘the miniature narrative has also been powerfully used to express views of how the world is - or might be… Constructed tableaux are forms of transmission or subversion of cultural values. They are usually patiently constructed; an illusion of realism is present but not the point’. (Newton, 2020). 

Knowles and Sowerwine's work sparks one’s imagination, opening up unexpected emotional responses. ‘Miniatures bridge the gap between on and off screen reality, disrupting normal perception to create significant narrative engagement. Our work investigates narratives of belonging, solitude and metamorphosis, engaging viewers immersively and emotionally.’

Small photographs

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