Underworld

Related to City Art
Installed from 20 February 2010 to 30 September 2010
Colourful large scale arachnid legs emerging from the disused underground men’s convenience at night.
Colourful large scale arachnid legs emerging from the disused underground men’s convenience.
Colourful large scale arachnid legs emerging from the disused underground men’s convenience at night.

Eight large scale, colourful legs created an arachnid emerging from the disused underground men’s convenience.

Artist: Dale Miles 
This artwork was temporary and is no longer at this location.

Artwork description

Underworld presented a series of colourful large scale arachnid legs emerging from the disused underground men’s convenience. It called to mind a giant bright spider crawling out from an underground tunnel. This installation responded to the broader city space by injecting vibrant colour into the usual brown and grey site, and dynamically opposing the city grid with the large diagonal shapes on its faceted surface.

The green glow gave the artwork a theatrical atmosphere and also celebrated the communities close to the site as a symbol of the nightclub culture.

The artwork’s design and symbolic form was a direct response to the existing architecture of the site, exploring the mystery surrounding the void made by the staircase. In contrast to the famous Louise Bourgeois Maman, a giant public artwork of a black spider, this work by Dale Miles in brightly coloured hues takes its inspiration from the local ecology and urban environment.

The artist drew on not only the past and present urban environment, but also gave voice to a now lost habitat, represented in the work by the form of the Sydney funnel web spider exiting its funnel.

“This work is a response to the mysteriousness of the shape of the space enclosed by the entrance fence and the 2 descending staircases. It is the mystery of the void inverted, the spider exiting its funnel.”

– Dale Miles, 2010

Artist

Dale Miles is a Sydney-based sculptor working with a diverse variety of materials. Since 2003 Dale has created work that questions the value of human progress and its effect on ecology.

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