ABSTRACT

In his essay for the 2002 Biennale of Sydney catalogue, curator Richard Grayson asserts, “Our idea of an objective world is a shared hypothesis”.1 This statement encapsulates the underlying tension that lies at the heart of this chapter: the collective desire for a given order that governs and explains the world in which we live (which is knowable, factual and consistent) and the reality that such a structure is an imposed proposition and is therefore subjective, contingent and constructed. It is in essence a fiction.2 However, the fact that this structure is a fiction is not to be lamented. Instead it opens up a discursive space in which a personal and collective relationship to the world can be explored. The collection is one such platform3 in which the discursive relationships between things, ideas, images and objects (natural and man-made, found and constructed) are examined. As a modality of knowledge-making shared by institutions and individuals, science and art, the collection represents a world in miniature. In this microcosm, taxonomy is applied and narrative is constructed, in part to satisfy the desire for order and control, and ultimately as a mirror that defines the subject who is collecting.4