Anthology


Autoria(s): Buining, Pip
Contribuinte(s)

Morris, Louise

Scott, Matt

Vennonen, Kimmo

Kaur, Sarah

The Cashews

Woodward, Joe

O'Brien, Caroline

Thunderstone Aboriginal Cultural and Land Management Services

Gugler, Ann

Lea, Liz

Piggin, Philip

Canberra Dance Theatre, Gold Ensemble

Canberra Academy of Dramatic Art (CADA)

Data(s)

01/01/2014

Resumo

This research is a practice led investigation of large-scale site specific performance installation works that respond to local and historical trauma, place making, and belonging for communities and audiences. The research is part of an ongoing PhD which is primarily questioning how layers of history and lived experience manifest or ‘imprint’ upon natural landscapes and urban sites using the driving concepts of landscape, archaeology, and community immersion to inform the practice. The site of the primary research investigation was Anthology www.anthology.net.au- a major site-specific theatrical journey through Westlake, now known as Stirling Park – Ngunawal land, a traditional pathway and the site of one of the camps created to house the workers building the new city of Canberra. Tents and a hall were erected followed by 61 cottages built in 1923, for married tradesmen building the infrastructure for the new Federal Capital of Australia. These families lived at Westlake for 50 years until the 1960’s when the families were relocated, the houses sold and removed. A community demolished. Westlake is now parkland (and prime real estate), nestled between the lake and the Embassies of Yarralumla. The event took place between 26th November and the 6th December 2014. The performance installation was created and produced over a 3-year period with $45,000.00 in funding provided by ArtsACT and the Centenary of Canberra. Anthology alluded to the power of immersive, site-sympathetic performance as a regenerative force for communities right now. What lies in wait for artists in sites, in places…to be uncovered…with its final form revealed through careful excavation? Anthology centralised rituals of remembrance and the importance of place as vital to the restoration and regeneration of community through processing and transcending what has been lost, hidden, suppressed or in the case of Westlake or Stirling Park ‘vanished’.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30070720

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

ArtsACT

Relação

http://www.anthology.net.au/

Palavras-Chave #Site-specific #Installation #Performance #Landscape #History #Trauma #Archaeology #immersive
Tipo

Performance