Made up of a curated bus tour featuring new music, video, sculpture and performance works dotted throughout Kingston, the tour will be held over two weekends in May, on the 18 May and May. Featuring voice-over stories told by legendary Australian actor Michael Caton, the bus tour will take passengers on a 2-hour experience that stops at six locations where each historical moment originally occurred. The six infamous moments the Six Moments in Kingsto n bus tour will visit, include:. The mysterious disappearance of aviator Fred Valentich who flew out from Moorabbin airport in never to be seen again. The story of The Grange, a homestead built on the Nepean Highway in the late 's, controversially demolished in and replaced with the Moorabbin Police Station and. The protest movements that mobilised Moorabbin, including the tent protest against homelessness by two teenage girls, protests for fair wages and anti-nuclear armament marches. The six artists selected and inspired by these significant moments include video artist and animator Laresa Kosloff, craftivist Tal Fitzpatrick, curator and artist Spiros Panigirakis, multidisciplinary collective Field Theory, conceptual artist Steven Rhall and performance artist Shane McGrath. Times: 9.


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Six Moments in Kingston
Supported through Creative Victoria's Creative Suburbs program, Public Art Commission curated the biggest public art project ever undertaken by the City of Kingston, responding to six unique moments in its history. Six contemporary artists working across performance, music, craft, installation and video, were commissioned to create public works that resopnded to:. Through workshops, site visits and historical talks, community members worked with artists to develop and deliver a creative response to each story. The works were presented via a public art bus tour across two weekends in May; featuring voice-over stories told by legendary Australian actor Michael Caton, the tour took passengers on a 2-hour experience that stopped at six locations where each historical moment originally occurred.
Six Moments in Kingston was delivered in Melbourne in May of Through workshops, site visits and historical talks, community members worked with artists to develop and deliver a creative response to each story. The works were presented via a public art bus tour across two weekends in May; featuring voice-over stories told by legendary Australian actor Michael Caton, the tour took passengers on a 2-hour experience that stopped at six locations where each historical moment originally occurred. Craftivist Banner Project. To achieve this, Tal Fitzpatrick invited local makers to create a collection of craftivist banners to be used during the final moment of the bus tour — a march to the steps of the Kingston City Hall now Kingston Arts Centre where Julie Cooper once worked. More than 40 makers attended these workshops. The vast majority of the makers were women with a passion for arts and crafts, although for some these workshops were an entirely novel experience. The makers who participated in this project worked voluntarily to create this unique collection of craftivist banners.
Post a comment. Filipino Community Choir Every suburb in every city across the world is a secret little hotbed of history and fascinating stories and Six Moments in Kingston is a sneak peak of just what kind of exciting and surprisingly important historical moments have taken place in Kingston. Purporting to cover a period from - this bus tour and public art event covers a period much greater than that with roots all the way back to WWI at least, and with strong links into what the future could hold. Curated by David Cross and Cameron Bishop , Six Moments in Kingston includes a joyful, painful and mysterious collection of people and moments brought to life in a variety of mediums by local artists. There are videos, performance art, museum tours, and craftivism filling the supposedly 1 hour bus tour although my tour ended up being about 2 hours long. Maybe we were all just having way to much fun? What I will say is an event like this is really as much or as little fun as you want it to be. Those who know me know I really like to get involved and respond to what is happening around me and I really think that is the only way to enjoy something of this sort. You also have the ability to sit back and wait to be 'entertained' in which case you may not have the best time of your life.