After reading Cape Grimm, I painted two children standing in front of a church, the boy cradling a fluffy white rabbit and the girl holding a falcon, surrounded by the lichen-stained gravestones, crushed-pink stone pathways, and wrought-iron fencing typical of Tasmanian country churches. In the background, stone devils squat on headstones and marble angels stride across others. A Tasmanian Childhood represents the synthesis of many of the ideas generated by exploring Tasmanian Gothic and Next Stop Antarctica. While the image functions primarily on an expressive level, its conceptual basis includes the interlocking themes of claustrophobia, Tasmanian history and trauma. The painting is informed by both readings of Tasmanian history, particul...