The
Archie Comic Book Series
Completed
in Fire-Works Gallery’s as part of the “NewFlames”
residency program in 2005, the original series consists of six
painted pieces on canvas ranging from 3m to 6m long. These images
have since been re-formatted and printed with archival inks
onto soft cotton paper as a limited edition print series. As
a teenager I remember reading my namesake’s adventures
in a different teenage world, one of a white American teenage
male. I substituted him for an Aboriginal male (myself) and
depicted actual events from my teenage years. This provided
a stark contrast between the world I knew (growing up relatively
poor in a white Christian male small town) to the world of the
ever insidious American world (affluent, successful, happy,
popular, acceptance). It also mirrors the American cultural
domination in Australia and loss of identity (or confusion of
identity as there are too many identities to choose from) for
a young Aborigine. Whereas the Archie comic always ended in
a punchline or a predicament being tidily resolved, mine had
an opposing punchline – one that really punches. The final
frame of each strip is like a reconfirmation of my (imposed)
status of a poor, black, loveless, alienated individual in a
dysfunctional, contradictory, violent and hegemonic world. This
disarray stems from the black and the white; my family who had
previously experienced the same, and the white community who
want to maintain themselves as the predominant influence.
Archie
Moore - 2006