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Jeremy Deller’s Father and Son
Jeremy Deller’s Father and Son. The Age’s art critic, Robert Nelson, failed to recognise the very famous Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch. Photograph: C Capurro/photo
Jeremy Deller’s Father and Son. The Age’s art critic, Robert Nelson, failed to recognise the very famous Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch. Photograph: C Capurro/photo

Melbourne art critic reviews melting Murdochs without noticing Rupert or Lachlan

This article is more than 2 years old

Robert Nelson of the Age admits ‘sometimes the eyes aren’t enough’ after missing the point of the installation in his review.

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When the Age’s art critic Robert Nelson reviewed a one-day art project in Melbourne on the weekend he noted the audience was looking at an installation by a UK conceptual artist in “puzzlement”.

“You could sense that viewers were searching in themselves for an explanation,” Nelson wrote in his review of Jeremy Deller’s work, Father and Son, which featured lifesize grey candles in the form of a seated old man and a younger man slowly burning to a puddle throughout the day.

But it was the art critic himself who was puzzled. Nelson wrote several hundred words about the meaning of the Turner prize-winning artist’s work without realising the father and son effigies were of Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch.

Of course, we’ve all made mistakes but rarely are they as public as the one published in the Age in print and online on Sunday. Remarkably, no one behind the scenes questioned why the writer had not mentioned the Murdochs in his piece, even though the likeness in the multiple pictures published was readily apparent.

No one appears to have noticed other news reports about the exhibition, including Guardian Australia’s Melting moguls: life-size Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch candles burn in Melbourne installation, on Saturday.

A spokesperson for Nine, publisher of the Age, declined to comment.

To his credit, Nelson wrote a mea culpa of sorts on Tuesday: “Sometimes the eyes aren’t enough … I just didn’t realise that the two antiquated specimens were the Murdochs.”

In the “spooky installation in a deconsecrated church in Collingwood” Nelson saw, in Sunday’s review, the Father and the Son of the Bible – not the father and son of the Murdoch media empire.

“Everything about this grand painting was foodie - right down to the table setting - but I didn’t realise that the figures represented actual people from the Gospels. It puts a different spin on the work, for sure…” https://t.co/6T1XrjzNv1 pic.twitter.com/JClLeb1T4V

— Ashleigh Wilson (@ashleighbwilson) November 9, 2021

“Everything about the installation at St Saviour’s Church of Exiles, Collingwood, was churchy – right down to the quotation from John’s Gospel, where Jesus declares his deference to his Heavenly Father,” Nelson wrote on Tuesday.

“But I didn’t realise that the figures represented Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch, the media princes whose various dealings don’t automatically strike you as theologically motivated.

“It puts a different spin on the work, for sure; and if you were really focused on the detail of the Murdoch mannequins being incinerated, the concept would come close to farce.”

Priceless: "I just didn’t realise that the two antiquated specimens were the Murdochs." pic.twitter.com/gGOXhvWutd

— riwoche རི་བོ་ཆེ་ (@riwoche) November 9, 2021

Nelson had an “out” but admirably chose not to take it. Some readers thought his original review involved a “conscious decision” to suppress the Murdoch name.

“A witty Jane Scott, director of Horsham Art Gallery, was kind enough to write: ‘Brilliant review … without actually mentioning the unmentionable’,” Nelson said.

“I’d like to bask in the glow of this subtle gamesmanship; but in all candour, I just didn’t realise the two antiquated specimens were the Murdochs.”

I argued it was more interesting to own the oversight rather than move on and pretend it never happened. I’m glad I did, this is a terrific and brave piece by Robert. https://t.co/030IHptnfN

— NickdMiller (@NickdMiller) November 9, 2021

He also admitted there were clues as he walked around the art gallery that he chose to ignore because he believes in “trusting my eyes”.

“My ears heard somebody talking about ‘Lachlan’ but the whisper didn’t really penetrate my critical visual armour,” he said. “If I suppressed the connection, it was all in my unconscious. It would have been nice to own the virtue of resisting more Murdoch posterity; but the truth is that I didn’t listen to my ears.”

But ultimately Nelson transcends what he calls the “embarrassment” and argues that the fact that he missed the context is negligible.

“The original interpretation along the scriptural lines – that the artist himself suggested – remains sound,” he wrote on Tuesday. “The additional fact can contribute an additional layer of interpretation, but that doesn’t make it a necessary layer of interpretation.”

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