An Unending Shadow: Works exploring dementia
Exploring a subject that is sensitive to a lot of people’s hearts, mother and daughter duo, Ann and Sophie Cape delve into the dark abstraction of dementia – something that can only be felt to be understood.
Deeply emotive and personal, An Unending Shadow: Works exploring dementia is by no means a product of passing observations, as Ann and Sophie express their own experiences of the impact of having a close relative who is living with dementia.
A key highlight is to join the artists this Tuesday 20 October at Mosman Art Gallery, ‘In conversation with Ann and Sophie Cape’, hosted by Richard Morecroft.
Hear from the artists’ themselves as they discuss the challenges and outcome of developing such a poignant exhibition. Richard will conduct a Q&A with the artists regarding their own individual practices, as well as the shared experiences of attempting to create a resolved and cohesive show that expresses the depth and diversity of dementia.
Whilst An Unending Shadow is by no means an easy viewing experience, what is so striking is its underlying tone of empathy – an attempt to make sense of the phenomena of dementia and its impact within the community.
A topic that is little talked about and discussed in public, the portraits are visual expressions and insights into the emotional and psychological ‘spaces’ that people with dementia inhabit – a telling portrait that those of their family and friends are familiar with.
Whilst the exhibition itself is beautifully balanced, the painting process had a greater impact than both artists expected.
Reflecting upon her personal experience, Ann commented that though she “thought the work would be cathartic… (I) have not fully addressed my role in the situation.”
While Sophie at first, was “interested, excited but unemotional,” reflecting that she was unprepared “for the true reality that hit,” agonizing over the works that she “destroyed over and over.”
A brave exhibition for both of the artists, by visually exploring the sensitive – and largely misunderstood – breadth of dementia, the exhibition stimulates conversations in the greater public community.
Make sure you head along this Tuesday to the talk, ‘In conversation with Ann and Sophie Cape’, as the artists’ stories and paintings shed light on a dark yet important conversation.
TALK
‘In conversation with Ann and Sophie Cape’
Tuesday, 20 October
The Grand Hall, Mosman Art Gallery & Community Centre
Bookings essential: http://www.trybooking.com/149566
EXHIBITION
An Unending Shadow: works exploring dementia
Until 29 November
Mosman Art Gallery
Images: Sophie Cape (top) and Ann Cape in the studio (bottom image), photographer Tim Connolly
Courtesy the artists and Mosman Art Gallery, Sydney.




Pulse, the title of his current exhibition at Utopia Art Sydney, alludes to the rhythmic equilibrium of parts that has long characterised his work. As...
Visiting Venice in late June, once the champagne flutes have emptied and the holders of “professional” badges have flown home, offers a different kind of...
The curator Con Gerakaris’s considered arrangement of diverse works conjures the distinctive cultural and physical topographies of Asia. Entering A Tear in the Fabric, the...
Walking into Anna Johnson’s studio is like passing through a portal into another world: a flight of rickety wooden stairs leads to the top floor...
After winning the Fishers Ghost Open Art Award last year for her epic video installation Margaret and the Grey Mare, 2023, opportunities across the theatre,...
Co-curators and longtime friends Helen Hyatt-Johnston, Brad Buckley, and Noel Thurgate and Gallery Curator Lizzy Galloway, selected the Buddha from Harpur’s extensive collection of Ch’an...
William Kentridge’s Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot opens with the artist pacing back and forth against the backdrop of his studio, with remnants of a sketch...
To commemorate fifty years since the invasion, Savvas travelled to Cyprus to video her walk from her mother’s home in Kaimakli, Nicosia, to her father’s...
National museums serve as custodians of collective memory. They preserve, interpret, and present stories that shape a nation’s cultural identity. The National Museum of Australia...