Salvaged from our place in the bush after the long drought and the devastating Green Wattle Creek Bushfire of 2019/20 that killed it, the sectioned trunk is rejoined together by hand-wrought steel curvatures, each unique piece fitted, riveted, chiselled in, bolted. Like a cyclonic weather system, a swirl of smaller branches and twigs climbs high above us, small structures twirling in its force. The lash of the Dragon’s tail. Its head lies at the root.

The Rainbow Serpent of Indigenous Australia, the Taniwha of the Maori, the Naga of India and Southeast Asia, the Chinese Dragon, the European Dragons; these and many other dragon serpents are associated with water, often dwelling under lakes or rivers, controlling its flow, or ascending into the sky where they send storms or replenishing rains. Benevolent life force or violent power, the Dragon demands human respect.
" From root to twig-tips, an entire native Cypress tree snakes across the gallery. "
Materials: native Cypress tree salvaged from the 2019-20 bushfires, steel, soundtrack and sound system, wool, Cypress benches, community participation. Listen to the whole soundtrack
