Art news and competitions

Ξ January 1st, 2009 | → | ∇ class stuff |

 

 

Junction 2010 e-newsletter

Registrations are now open for Junction 2010. The conference and artistic festival program is available on our website and early bird offers are available till June 15.

Registrations now open

Registrations now open

Registrations are now open for Junction 2010.

Julie Boyd, President of Regional Arts Australia says that  “We are incredibly excited that Launceston is hosting this year’s conference, following on from our last conference in Alice Springs, which was a smashing success! Regional artists, art workers and volunteers from all over Australia will really get the chance to experience Tasmania’s vibrant culture, interspersed with a host of national and international speakers and artists”.

Angela Driver, General Manager, Junction 2010 says that  “With a maximum capacity of 1000 delegate, I urge you to book early and ensure you don’t miss out on what is shaping up to be the largest conference yet! ”.

So register now and ensure you are a part of the biggest regional arts event in the country.To register log onto www.junction2010.com.au. Early bird discounts are on offer for people who sign up before June 18th.

Connecting the future

Conference and festival program unveiled

Conference and festival program unveiled

The official program for Junction 2010, the seventh Regional Arts Australia (RAA) national conference was unveiled in Launceston on April 13. The event was attended by more than 120 people from across the arts, government, corporate and academic world.  

The unveiling of the conference and festival program created a distinct buzz and anticipation within the attendees with all of them eagerly looking forward to the actual event. 

Conference program highlights

Conference program highlights

Forums: Two forums produced by Tasdance and the Design Centre featuring international key notes as they explore current concerns and future possibilities in their respective genres.

Plenary’s : 6 plenary’s with four internationally regarded keynotes

Dr Ernesto Sirolli – a noted authority in the field of sustainable economic development and social enterprise in partnership with Tascoss and the State Governement.

Francois Matarosso - an independent researcher and writer specialising in community cultural practice. His work focuses on practice-led research, mostly around the impact of participation in culture

Mark Peche - Internationally recognized as the man who brought virtual reality into the World Wide Web, Mark Pesce has been exploring the frontiers of the future for nearly two decades

Mike White a UK authority on the role of the arts in health promotion and community health, contending there is a direct correlation between the social determinants of health and the biological imperative to be creative.

Breakout sessions: 43 sessions covering a range of topics 

• The role of Arts in Bushfire recovery • New technology and how it can enhance, detract and confound • Social enterprise and the artist as entrepreneur • The value of research and evaluation • Practical tips for philanthropy, and • Arts and Health

Speakers at these sessions  include Robyn Archer, Marcus Westbury, Deborah Conway, Elizabeth Walsh, Jane Haley and a rich array of practicing artists, academics, researcher, philosophers, philanthropists, poets, arts enthusiast and community developers. There is also a not to be missed session by Australia Council Community Partnerships titled “x marks the spot” where a young panel of women will discuss the unique position women have as artists and facilitators in the community arts and cultural development sector.

Hands on workshops: 20 workshops for participation by the delegates including  • Dance like a Man by an Indigenous dance group from Western Australia brought here by Ausdance WA • Willow Furniture making by Jed Gillian • Finger knitting with participants from the knitting room a project run in Hobart by Uniting Aged Care • A series of walking Tours of that will explore Launceston’s nooks and crannies • Speed Meeting sessions aimed at producing maximum networking in minimum time!

Other Highlights:

Opening ceremony devised by the Tasmanian Aboriginal Working group with Ian Pidd, Jaspa Woods from Festival of Voices in Hobart and Mandi Field from Silent Landscape Projects in Victoria.

Twilight sessions using Petcha Kucha. A funky format giving speakers 20 slides and 20 seconds to speak to each slide.

The Junction Function: A dinner featuring a menu of fresh, local produce designed by celebrity chef Fiona Hoskins, and a menu of dance curated by Tasdance member Trisha Dunn. Workshop: Using ‘Open Space Technology’, which combines the level of synergy and excitement present in a good coffee break, with the substantive activity and results characteristic of a good meeting. This will ask “How do we best take hold of the opportunities currently before us to ensure a vibrant future for the arts? 

Festival program highlights

Festival program highlights

Junction Arts Festival promises to be an exuberant show case of wonderful art encompassing theatre, dance, opera, visual arts, writing, installation and more. Plus a great program of music, cabaret and variety in a genuinely cool festival club.

It features the best of local and interstate art with more than 44 events of which 38 are free and many are participatory.

The program includes two international collaborations

Haircuts by Children by the award winning Canadian company Mammalian Diving Reflex 

Two projects by Acclaimed Indonesian architect Eko Prawoto. The Zero Project, an installation created with a zero material budget and the Kraton exhibition, a result of Eko’s  residency with the UTAS School of Architecture and Design.

Interstate offerings include

Car-cophony by Matthew Timmis (SA) a performance installation with 12 cars, their drivers and stereos

Landed by illumination artist Cindy Drennin (SA), transforming Launceston’s so called ugliest building, Henty House. 

The Outhouse by TRAX (NSW), A participatory research tool and interactive installation, The Outhouse turns the old style photo booth on its head by replacing it with custom built digital media technology

World premiers by Tasmanian artists including

WeTubeLIVE A living exhibition of 100 solos ripped from the internet and performed by a diverse group of young Tasmanians, WeTubeLIVE is a playful response to the video sharing site YouTube. Presented by Stompin.

New work by the Tasmanian Leather Orchestra, Marcus Tatton and the Tasmanian Writers Centre and back by popular demand : Sex Death and a Cup of Tea by Tasmanian Theatre Company, The Knitting Room by Uniting Aged Care and Jane Franklin by Silkweed.

Each evening The Junc Room, the festival club in the city centre, will feature a terrific music program ranging from surf pop to hip hop, and a selection of eclectic cabaret and theatre works from across Australia. Fanning out from the festival Club will be a constellation of free events with writers creating love letters in cafes, musicians roaming the mall in rickshaws, dancers in shop fronts, hotel rooms turned into art galleries and church halls into international Zine hubs.

Speaking about the festival Artistic Director Ian Pidd promises that “if you take a walk in the city during the event you will certainly come across things to intrigue, stimulate and delight you – up trees, in parks, on street corners.”   

For complete program log onto www.junction2010

 

 

 

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ART CHALLENGE ENTRY
my_entry.jpg
The image was provided and I decided to make n ATC out of it as I am in a lot of ATC swap clubs.Hope you like it!
Lee
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-Another challenge entry ——————

this one is for 100 pages

“…just today, I was thinking of how amazing it is that if a hundred members created a journal page with the same images that chances are a hundred totally different pages would be created as the images filtered through our individuality…” —Linda, AlteredBooks group member
“What happens when you give a group of artists the same image and ask them to create with it? That’s the premise behind 100 Pages. Artists are asked to begin with the same base image, and use it somewhere, somehow in their work.-———————————-——————–  A Little History 100 Pages started in 2002. The original 24 pages were mailed in, scanned, and then bound together to create a book for the ISABA library.”
  • my entry
  • 100pages.jpg
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Art Creations 

  • another entry in the weekly challenge
  • Heidi117_1_.jpg
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5 Responses to ' Art news and competitions '

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  1. admin said,

    on March 14th, 2009 at 6:25 pm

    She doesn’t look too good on a black background, she looked much better on white! LOL! Just my luck!
    Lee
    To vote for my entry use the art creations link above.

  2. Angelina said,

    on March 15th, 2009 at 8:38 am

    Beautiful!

  3. femmy said,

    on March 23rd, 2010 at 1:24 pm

    beautiful pieces!!!!

  4. Elvira said,

    on March 24th, 2010 at 2:01 pm

    Wow, these are soooo pretty!!!!! Love it!!!

  5. Hermine said,

    on March 25th, 2010 at 9:30 am

    Its gorgeous

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