The University of Sydney Library acknowledges that our buildings, collections, and practices exist on unceded Aboriginal lands. We recognise the diversity and knowledges of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff and students across all the lands the University stands on, and respect the ongoing connection Aboriginal people have to these lands, their cultural practices, knowledge systems and histories. We pay our respects to their Elders, past and present, who have handed down custodianship to each generation for more than 60,000 years.
Money, J. (2021). Yilabara (Now). Filmed on Gadigal Country. Commissioned by the University of Sydney Library
Carolyn McKay's artwork Floating between Couches and Motels
The Herbert Smith Freehills Law Library presented an intriguing artwork by criminologist and artist Dr Carolyn McKay. Floating Between Couches & Motels responds to Dr McKay's criminal law research into crimes in motel rooms as featured in her authored piece Who’s been sleeping in my bed? Cheap motel rooms and transgression.
The art installation built on Dr McKay’s 2022 Crime Scene Motel Project , explores the unique, but often overlooked, characteristics of motels that invite and enable transgression.
The idea for this work developed when Dr McKay while teaching criminal law at the Sydney Law School. "I have attempted to theorise the motel room as a site chosen for criminal transgression, asking: What is it about these private-but-shared spaces that enable, perhaps beckons, criminal behaviour? And what tangible and intangible traces remain?"
Each neon sign in this artwork presents a fractured narrative or snippet of forensic evidence taken from criminal case law regarding motels. The narratives derived from Dr McKay’s extensive online research of criminal case law of hundreds of cases from Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the US regarding motel crime.
Dr McKay explains: “These selected phrases seemed to be particularly evocative and almost poetic; together they are suggestive of a unique crime scene. Motels are supposed to be places of restful stay or holiday, but these phrases subvert that concept.”
Dr McKay’s Crime Scene Motel Project received the 2023 ‘Non-Traditional Research Output Award’ from the Australian Legal Research Awards, a prestigious national scheme funded by the Council of Australian Law Deans.
Floating Between Couches & Motels was on display in The Herbert Smith Freehills Law Library from 29 July 2024 – 13 Feb 2025.