Transformative climate change installation by Nicholas Mangan: Viewed 20 July to 4 August 2023
- s3225043
- Sep 20, 2023
- 3 min read
Updated: Oct 20, 2023
Mangan, Nicholas. 2023. Core coralations and Death assemblage. Film and sculpture. National Gallery of Victoria, Australia.

Photograph by Elizabeth Cole of Nicholas Mangan's installation Core coralations and Death assemblage, 2023.
I viewed this installation on three occasions between 20 July and 4 August, each time spending longer sitting with the work as I became more comfortable with the subject matter of global warming and its impact on the Great Barrier Reef. While I have already included a review of this installation in my annotated bibliography (Cole 2023a), I have also included the works in this dossier, due to their role in showing me the aesthetic potential of conveying sensation (Grosz 2005, 1-3).
As context, my annotated bibliography is shown in full (indented):
Commissioned for Melbourne Now, this work uses film and sculpture to highlight the damage wrought to the Great Barrier Reef, from the arrival of Captain Cook to recent mass bleaching events.
Set in a large, ominously dark room, the twenty minute film loops continuously on a wall-mounted monitor. Opening with the arrival of Cook’s ship The Endeavor and referencing the irony that a plug of coral saved the ship from sinking (Mangan 2023), the mostly black and white film intersperses aerial shots of the reef with the artist’s attempts to commune with dead coral, and scientific work to develop new heat-resistant strains. The watery, pumping soundscape is often unbearably loud.
The monitor’s size is echoed in the nearby sculptural panel. Made from coral fragments as a form of ossuary, and infused with a bioluminescent pigment, the panel is activated every few minutes by ultra violet light, bathing the room in blue.
This work’s haunting beauty and sparse composition suggests aesthetic possibilities for my work on concealment and protection, and memorialising the impermanent. It also resonates with me conceptually, as I find myself drawn inexorably from an inner to an external focus by the existential threat of climate change (Cole 2023a).
The reference to the arrival of The Endeavor in 1770 provides a temporal and colonial context. The use of text in the film is a succinct means of communicating the key concepts, and providing relief from the visual images, while the multi-dimensional addition of the pulsing blue light and soundscape amplify the immersive nature of the installation. These are all points for me to consider as I develop my practice in this thematic area.
Informed by recent learnings in the Critical Frameworks A course, I note that the works have both a denotative meaning, through showing the remains of dead coral reefs and laboratory based recovery efforts, as well as a connotative meaning, through the suggestion of an ossuary. The ossuary is a symbol of death which must be culturally learned. Together the installation exemplifies the view of Giles Deleuze that art addresses problems through generating an affective response (Grosz 2008, 3), which in turn highlight priorities for attention (Dukes et al. 2021, 816).
Bibliography:
Cole, Elizabeth. 25 August 2023 2023a. Critical Frameworks A - Annotated bibliography. RMIT University.
Dukes, Daniel, Kathryn Abrams, Ralph Adolphs, Mohammed E. Ahmed, Andrew Beatty, Kent C. Berridge, Susan Broomhall, Tobias Brosch, Joseph J. Campos, Zanna Clay, Fabrice Clément, William A. Cunningham, Antonio Damasio, Hanna Damasio, Justin D’Arms, Jane W. Davidson, Beatrice de Gelder, Julien Deonna, Ronnie de Sousa, Paul Ekman, Phoebe C. Ellsworth, Ernst Fehr, Agneta Fischer, Ad Foolen, Ute Frevert, Didier Grandjean, Jonathan Gratch, Leslie Greenberg, Patricia Greenspan, James J. Gross, Eran Halperin, Arvid Kappas, Dacher Keltner, Brian Knutson, David Konstan, Mariska E. Kret, Joseph E. LeDoux, Jennifer S. Lerner, Robert W. Levenson, George Loewenstein, Antony S. R. Manstead, Terry A. Maroney, Agnes Moors, Paula Niedenthal, Brian Parkinson, Ioannis Pavlidis, Catherine Pelachaud, Seth D. Pollak, Gilles Pourtois, Birgitt Roettger-Roessler, James A. Russell, Disa Sauter, Andrea Scarantino, Klaus R. Scherer, Peter Stearns, Jan E. Stets, Christine Tappolet, Fabrice Teroni, Jeanne Tsai, Jonathan Turner, Carien Van Reekum, Patrik Vuilleumier, Tim Wharton, and David Sander. 2021. "The rise of affectivism." Nature human behaviour 5 (7): 816-820. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01130-8.
Grosz, Elizabeth. 2005. Time travels : feminism, nature, power.Next wave. Durham: Duke University Press.
---. 2008. Chaos, Territory, Art: Deleuze and the Framing of the Earth.Wellek Library lectures. New York: Columbia University Press.
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