Mimi

Clip 1: Investing in the unknown

1 min 50 sec ( skip to teachers’ notes)

Taken from the short film Mimi (2002)

Original title classification M – this clip chosen to be PG

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Please be aware that this clip may contain the names, images and voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who may now be deceased.

Curator’s clip description

An art auction. A woman is purchasing two pieces of art – a Mimi statue and a painting of a barramundi fish.

Teachers’ notes

provided by The Le@rning Federation

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This clip, taken from the beginning of the short feature Mimi, shows Catherine (Sophie Lee) at an art auction, where she successfully bids for two Indigenous artworks, a Mimi spirit sculpture and a painting of a barramundi fish. Credits for the film are cleverly included within the auction catalogue that Catherine is flipping through. As she collects her purchases, she asks the auctioneer if the artworks will double in value over the next year. Returning to her modern apartment, she leans the artworks against a wall, checks her phone messages and prepares to go out to meet her friends. She puts the artworks in a closet, discovering the Mimi sculpture has left a mark on the wall, and leaves the apartment.

Educational value points

  • The Indigenous art market has flourished since the 1990s and is now the strongest sector of Australia’s fine arts industry, with around 5,000 artists producing art and craft works worth more than $100 million a year in 2007. There are about 44 Indigenous community art centres across central and northern Australia, as well as specialist Aboriginal art galleries in the major cities.
  • Investors have capitalised on the growing popularity of Indigenous art, particularly in the international art market. Unscrupulous intermediaries have been accused of profiteering from Indigenous artists by paying nominal amounts for works that are then sold at much higher prices.
  • Contemporary Indigenous art is an ongoing part of the oldest continuing tradition of painting in the world – a tradition that embodies Indigenous spirituality and tells Indigenous stories. The current interest in Indigenous art had its genesis in the 1970s when Geoff Bardon, a school teacher posted to the Papunya settlement in central Australia, encouraged Aboriginal artists to use Western materials such as acrylic paint to paint traditional designs.
  • According to the beliefs of Indigenous people from central Australia and Arnhem Land, Mimi are mischievous and capricious spirits who are believed to possess mystical powers and to live forever. Mimi taught the first Indigenous people in western Arnhem Land how to hunt and paint, and are often consulted by Elders, who can see them. Tall, thin beings who live in the crevices of rocks and caves, they speak the same language, observe the same ceremonies and are bound together by the same kinship system as the local Indigenous clan group. Mimi feature in Dreaming stories and art from this region.
  • Mimi mixes comedy and horror to question attitudes about Indigenous art and Aboriginality. In keeping with the horror genre, the mark left by the Mimi when it is first brought back to Catherine’s apartment presages the bloodlike tracks that the Mimi later makes across the apartment’s clean white surfaces as it colonises Catherine’s territory. Though put out of sight in a cupboard, the Mimi refuses to be ignored or forgotten. This is in keeping with the horror convention of items being placed out of view only to return to haunt or terrorise the protagonist. That the Mimi is also scared of Catherine adds a comedic twist to its otherwise menacing presence.
  • Sophie Lee began her career in television before moving into film. Lee first appeared in the television series The Flying Doctors, and also hosted the Bugs Bunny Show in the late 1980s, which was popular among both children and adults. She presented the program Sex in 1991. Her first film role was in Muriel’s Wedding (1994) as Tania, the ‘friend from hell’, and this established her talent as a comedic actor, leading to roles in He Died With a Felafel in His Hand (1999), Holy Smoke (1998) and The Castle (1997). Lee was a member of the Melbourne band Freaked Out Flower Children.
  • Writer and director Warwick Thornton is also an internationally acclaimed cinematographer. Thornton trained as a cinematographer at the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA) in Alice Springs and then went to the Australian Film, Television and Radio School. His credits as a cinematographer include Radiance (1998), Buried Country (2000) and Beyond Sorry (2003). He has directed several documentaries including The Good, The Bad and The Loud (2003), about the history of CAAMA music, as well as the short film Green Bush (2005), which won the Panorama Award for Best Short Film at the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival.
australian screen