Party 25


Autoria(s): Armstrong, Keith M.; Fry, Tony; Willis, Ann-Marie
Data(s)

29/09/2004

Resumo

Party 25 involved the conception and public launch of a radically new form of political party during that year’s Australian general election. The entire project was also intentioned as a conceptual artwork. Party 25 avoided conventional party-political approaches and was neither a protest group nor an advocacy organisation, but rather a new form of political association that confronted what we understood as the debilitating limits and impotence of contemporary parliamentary democracies in transitioning our societies towards ecological sustainability.----- Party 25 was based on responding to one fundamental question which all of its policies served - “how does humanity get to the 25th century?” By basing itself on a dramatically long-term approach uncommon within conventional politics it raised the proposition that humanity does not have an assured future. Party25 therefore shaped its agendas around the idea that any future now lies in human hands and so how humanity treats the ecologies on which it depends innately determines the quality of the inseparable relationship between its being, and the being of the biophysical world.----- The project was conceived through a number of discussion papers, workshops and creative works and was launched publicly at the Judith Wright Centre Brisbane accompanied by a full length showing of evocative imagery, text and sound, a series of speeches and the launch of a succinct web presence. Through the website and this party launch a community of interested participants and creative practitioners was sought who then would form the basis of a nascent community of change.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/25843/

Relação

http://www.embodiedmedia.com/#/page/party-25

Armstrong, Keith M., Fry, Tony, & Willis, Ann-Marie (2004) Party 25. [Other]

Direitos

Copyright 2004 Collective Futures Group

Fonte

N/a

Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #199999 Studies in the Creative Arts and Writing not elsewhere classified #190599 Visual Arts and Crafts not elsewhere classified #Sustainability Politics #Political Art #Performance and Media #Ecological Arts
Tipo

Creative Work