The National Portrait Gallery rehangs its permanent galleries at least twice a year. This summer, the Robert Oatley gallery, which typically displays the ‘earliest works from the NPG collection’, is curated with a particular focus in mind. Titled Facing New Worlds, the rehang centres on the relationships forged between Europeans and Indigenous people during the formative Age of Empire – roughly the 1760s to the 1840s – and pivots around small clusters of individuals rather than moving from one important person to the next. A joint effort by scholars, curators, and Indigenous researchers, it explores both how those clusters formed through relations of mutual interest, and what effects these had in the making of modern life in the southern hemisphere. Facing New Worlds borrows nearly 35 items from sister institutions to complement over 40 works from the Portrait Gallery’s own collection.
With an emphasis on relationships, the rehang pushes us to think about Australia’s foundations in new ways. We see that Indigenous people were involved in every aspect of Europe’s rediscovery of the Pacific world, contributing knowledge, assistance, and diplomacy at critical junctures, but also, at times, re-routing, resisting, and re-configuring imperial ambition. The story of early Europeans in the Pacific was the result of countless negotiations with the first inhabitants rather than a sum of isolated colonial achievements. By the same token, the story of Indigenous experience during the Age of Empire was larger than dispossession alone. It included tales of Indigenous people handling, influencing, using, or otherwise surviving European onslaught from the mid-eighteenth century. Portraiture, curated in clusters, helps us see these influential relations between newcomers and natives. It points simultaneously to the human face of our region’s imperial past and the intertwined nature of that history.