
A Sculpture Made From 80 Tonnes Of Sand, Mirrorscape Is Remarkable But Too Much Is Left Unsaid
On a low, curved stage sits a scene of mundane wreckage. Two utility vehicles serve as centrepieces. One is upturned, its front chassis exposed. It rests on the carcass of a two-seater lounge. A mattress is draped over the upper side of the wreck, a broken log, a signifier of the non-human world in this otherwise secular scene of anthropocentric waste, rests against the lower side.
The other vehicle is upright but seriously damaged. Another mattress rests against it. A bundle of electrical conduit spills out of the tray. A worker's boot limps over the bedding like a deflated balloon.
It's as though a couple of ute loads of tradies have smashed into a Derwent Park bungalow. Photo credit: Mona/Jesse Hunniford. Image courtesy of the artist and the Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Strewn around the battered wrecks are pieces of domestic infrastructure and appliances: bricks, cracked concrete slab, a washing machine, broken joists and beams, snarled corrugated iron sheets.
It's as though a couple of ute loads of tradies have smashed into a Derwent Park bungalow and scampered off.
This scene is framed by a curved wall of brushed metal panelling, lit above by fluorescent light panels, and sealed behind a wall of glass. This glass is both a protector of the delicate eroding sculpture, and another contrasting visual metaphor employing the work's foundational element, sand.
Commitment to realismMercier is a sculptor and a stage director, and the controlled composition of this scene of chaos attests to his multiple talents.
The team of sculptors – Kevin Crawford, Enguerrand David, Sue McGrew and Leonardo Ugolini – have crafted a remarkable piece.
The commitment to realism is impressive, from the quilting in the mattresses, to the indentations on the utes' bodywork, to the creases in the sofa cushions, and the sly joke of a finely crafted sandshoe as if discarded by one of the artists as they stepped from the sculptural into the spectatorial space.
Looking closer, the human objects – utes, mattresses, sofas – merge into or out of sandstone rock faces, like those found along Derwent River, including the peninsula upon which MONA stands.
The commitment to realism is impressive. Photo credit: Mona/Jesse Hunniford. Image courtesy of the artist and the Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
What are we to make of the deliberate collapsing of the“natural” and“human-made” in this piece?
Mercier styles Mirrorscape as a“diorama of catastrophe”. He describes it as:
The conflation of“natural” and“man-made” here, and in the composition of the work, grates. While Mirrorscape may reflect a“man-made” landscape of disaster, precisely whose landscape is it, and who ultimately is responsible for it?
A work about classMirrorscape is superficially a work about class. Its blunt appropriation of the signifiers of working-class labour and domesticity contradicts the claim that the scene is an archetypal landscape, or humanity's refuse.
Mirrorscape might be appreciated as a witty piece reflecting on the kind of“treasures” of our age that future archaeologists might excavate in a local tip. But I found it provided little connection to the contemporary subjects of our present-day disasters.
Mirrorscape is haunted, so to speak, by the figures who drove the wrecked utes, slept on the wasted mattresses. But their identities and complex lives, very much of our own time, are rendered invisible.
As a meditation on catastrophe and the“powers of destruction,” Mirrorscape offers a conservative reckoning: that the contemporary human tragedies of inequality, alienated labour, class division and the waste these produce are the“natural” order of things.
Mirrorscape is haunted by the figures who drove the wrecked utes, slept on the wasted mattresses. Photo credit: Mona/Jesse Hunniford. Image courtesy of the artist and the Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
This is evident in the way the human objects merge into and out of the rock faces, each designed to erode to the common element: sand.
In interviews , Mercier stresses the work's debt to locality, and his engagement with the working-class suburbs neighbouring MONA:
But really, how local is this scene, and what value is there in the reflections it provokes? There is little in this sculpture that relates it directly to the place where it is displayed.
The images Mercier has chosen, while unconventional, are nevertheless generic. This dulls the potential for the kind of reflection on catastrophe that might impel a change in the minds of its viewers.
Will MONA's well-heeled attendees recognise their implication in the human catastrophe this work seeks to capture? Will visitors from the suburbs that neighbour MONA appreciate the reflection that Mirrorscape offers?
If art is to play any role in motivating us to confront the catastrophes that are now upon us, it needs to go beyond the kind of slowly eroding stasis that is Mirrorscape's defining quality.
Mirrorscape is at MONA, Hobart, until February 16 2026.


Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- B2BINPAY And Athletic Club Continue Partnership Into New Season
- No Limit Holdings Goes All In On Future $15 Trillion Digital Asset Industry With Closing Of Oversubscribed Fund
- Mezo Launches First Full-Stack Bitcoin Economy To Mainnet
- Akron, A 100% Cypherpunk Bitcoin Wallet, Launches To Support Spaces Protocol
- B2PRIME Announces B2MEET - Private Forums For Top-Tier Market Insights
- B2broker Receives“Best Liquidity Provider” Award At Forex Traders Summit Dubai 2025
Comments
No comment