David Walsh and MONA: Tasmania’s most eccentric collector

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He is attracted to controversy, and he likes to provoke, and when he sells off artwork from his collection it doesn't go unnoticed. On June 30 at Christie's, David Walsh is to present Chris Ofili's Holy Virgin Mary (1996) which he acquired from Charles Saatchi himself; Great Deeds Against the Dead (1994) by Jake and Dinos Chapman; an early Damien Hirst spin painting from the year the artist won the Turner Prize and Jenny Saville's Matrix (1995). These four key works, Walsh is hoping, will cover the costs for an expansion to his MONA museum which will house works by James Turrell. Dubbed as the Tasmanian devil by The New Yorker, David Walsh, who grew up on the island home to the aforementioned beast, is these days best known for his private museum in Hobart focusing on Aboriginal art, antiquities, classic masters and contemporary art, all of which are centered around two themes: sex and death. Walsh forged his destiny on the floors of the gambling rooms, emerging from a working class background in the 1960s, nothing could have predicted this more improbable fate.

The gambling enthusiast with an explosive character

In the belief he suffers from Asperger’s Syndrome, labelled as a high-functioning autism usually displaying above-average intelligence, Walsh studied maths at university whilst simultaneously discovering his passion for gambling. During this period, Walsh met Zeljko Ranogajec, today considered one of the most innovative black jack players in the world. Together, they created new challenges. The partners in crime descended on the gambling rooms and hippodromes, successively winning thanks to Walsh’s detailed mathematical equations.  Banned from the Australian gambling scene, Macao, South Africa and even Korea become their new gambling hot-spots. Yet as Walsh’s wealth quickly amassed, his feelings of guilt grew deeper.  



Role of the museum re-examined

Completely by accident, Walsh found his salvation in art. A winning of $20,000 in South Africa highlights the beginning of his new venture in 1992. Unable to leave the country with more money than when he arrived, Walsh bought a Yoruba door from a Nigerian palace, the first piece of his collection. A few years later, Walsh attempted to create his first museum in Tasmania, however visitors were seemingly disinterested and the project failed.  

In January 2011, MONA Museum of Old and New Art opened in Hobart, challenging traditional intricacies of the museum setup. Walsh’s museum has made the space more accessible and less intimidating in the eyes of the public. At the entrance, visitors receive an iPod with a GPS system. As works of art are not labelled, the iPod locates the viewer to inform him or her of their surroundings in real time. The new technology named “O”, was developed especially for the museum. John Kaldor, member of the international committee for MoMa in New York, heralded the museum, cited in The New Yorker “MONA has been a watershed in the way that art is understood by the general public.” (The New Yorker, 2013).
 


HAPPENING
David Walsh (photo via Blouin)

 

Somewhere between sex and death

The estimated €78 million collection sits within 6000m2 of open space. Curators Olivier Varenne and Nicole Durling painstakingly constructed the layout with Walsh, where the varied collection coexists between sex and death. The explicit content of the museum is surprising. Wim Delvoye’s Cloaca machine, sculptures of women’s vaginas by Jamie McCartney mounted on the wall, a transmission of Boltanski’s life on repeat, 24 hours a day and an Egyptian sarcophagus dating to 600 B.C.E. Between the sarcophagus and suggestive photos, themes of sex and death are omnipresent in the museum.


 

HAPPENING
Snake (detail), 1970 to 1972, Sir Sidney Nolan