Archive for the 'public spaces' Category

basement spaces - a strategy [and an invitation]

Friday, October 24th, 2008

I think i’ve mentioned before that we’re rethinking our approach to basement spaces over the next year [if you're new to the blog, we use the basement carpark at my office in Melbourne's city centre, and curate sacred spaces and art installations in the space]. Previously we’ve created spaces around the different church seasons, but from next year we’re going to shape the spaces around a more secular calendar. We’ll curate a space for Valentine’s Day, another on the winter solstice [which is in June in the southern hemisphere], another on the summer solstice [our christmas - where we may even avoid the christmas theme completely].

I think ‘the public’ [cf 'the private'?] are interested in / intrigued by / gasping for an encounter with a story that speaks of life and light, and that many resonate with a christian version of that story… but they want their engagement with the christmas story, for example, to be very different than that. I don’t know that the church will reclaim christmas from its nostalgic home easily [and since many churches were complicit in the process of creating its nostalgia, we might not have a right to try!]. Rather than fight that battle, we’ve decided we’re going to try Valentine’s Day, the solstices - perhaps something like Hiroshima Day as well - as moments to explore themes of life, darkness, fear, hope, love, grief…

I’ve mentioned before that a group of us are meeting once a month to talk about spaces [and life, imagination, faith and creativity]. We’re using that time to do the broad brushstrokes of planning - and anyone is welcome, of course. But I’d hate to preclude people from being involved in the basement project just because they might not want to get involved in a group like this on an ongoing way. So if you’re interested in being part of one of the spaces, or in talking about how you might be involved in other ways, let me know…

melbourne festival

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

A friend just gave me Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu’s cd, Gurrumul, which I’m really enjoying. He’s part of the lineup for the Melbourne Arts Festival which begins this week. I won’t get to hear him but I am going to see Batsheva perform Three on Saturday night - I saw them a few years ago at the festival, and still it rates as the best live performance i’ve seen, of any genre. I’m trying not to have unrealistic expectations about Saturday night.

We’re also going to poke around Ecstatic City for a while on Saturday, and the 21:100:100 sound exhibition at Gertrude Contemporary Art Space sounds fantastic [go read the description!], and if the stars align right i’ll get to the concert performance. Melbourne’s great during the festival - lots of street art and performances. If your budget’s tight, there’s a page full of free stuff here.

This isn’t connected to the festival, but I’ve put it into my diary for next week. From the Irfan website:

irfanspace: an exploration of the pathways and spaces between people, cultures, past, present and eternity. sound, images and poetry from islamic cultures and traditions around the world invite reflection and engagement locally, globally, internally.

irfanspace is a mixed-media exhibition featuring photography, sound and video installation, poetry, and interactive online media presented by Mark Pedersen, Natalia Gould and Nazid Kimmie at Kinross House, 603 Toorak Rd. throughout October 2008.

The opening was last night, but i unfortunately couldn’t get there. Nazid Kimmie, whose poetry is part of the exhibition, wrote about it on his blog. I’m looking forward to seeing it.

parking day in melbourne

Friday, September 19th, 2008

parking day

there’s a park set up down at our local shopping strip today… makes me happy.

caos at abbotsford

Monday, June 16th, 2008

roddy hamilton writes the loveliest liturgies, and the community at abbotsford were home away from home for me, for all those months i was in scotland. i love what they’re doing with the CAOS arts project: 700 people involved in art and music in the local shopping centre on saturday… wordy…

new things…

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

filling the gaps between the spaces… over the last couple of years we’ve built up a collective of people who have been working on sacred spaces and installations in the carpark. until now it’s been pretty random, but we’ve decided that this might be the time to get a little more intentional at the collaboration / community thing. so, starting July, we’re going to meet once a month to have dinner and a drink…

we’re having dinner at the wesley anne in northcote in a couple of weeks… let me know if you want to come and i’ll fill you in on details.

another kind of table… this is a slightly more vague idea. i’ve been talking with a friend who is a muslim about creating some opportunities for informal conversations between young christian and muslim women. the kind of conversation we’re thinking of wouldn’t be specifically about faith, but more about re-imagining our community, and taking our place in that… it would need to be for females only [yes, i know that sucks for you males, and feel free to start your own!], and would take place over meals. i’m trying to gauge interest before we go any further… let me know if you would like to be part of that, and if you know other women who would. we’d only need a dozen people to make it work. i know we could get enough people from all the usual suspects, but i thought i’d open it up more broadly here too.

photos from mike

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

[update: more photos from mike here - thanks mike.]

mike takes the best photos.

looking towards the entrance of the basement, projection of degraves lane on the ceiling…

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holy ground …

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holy ground :: holy city wrap up

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

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[writing hopes in the laneway]

we were visited this afternoon by a freelance photographer who came to take photos of the space for an article about the alt worship project… he’d never been to a christian thing before. ‘it’s really grungy and edgy’, he said. ‘it reminds me of the tate modern’.

i really liked the space, and it seemed to tell a story that resonated with many of those who interacted with it. today seemed better than yesterday, for no apparent reason - i guess that’s just one of the variables of doing this kind of space. there were a few slightly confused looks from people who were walking through it, but also a lot of responses from people which showed they got it, and they liked what they got. we had some fantastic conversations with people from around the country who have thought of doing stuff like this, and now think they might have the courage to just go and do it [on reflection, that's as good a comment as the tate modern one!]

it was a pretty subtle and nuanced space this time. we went micro - projecting video onto corners of walls, using videos on ipods… we put a slide projector at the very end of a black passage. the words in front of the projector would disappear in the gaps between slides [you may recognise the words - we adapted Doug Gay's 'holy city' from Alternative Worship]. a lot of people would have looked at the slides from the entry of the passageway and not gone down the end - we decided to risk people not seeing stuff, rather than drawing their attention to things.

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the space was designed around the story of moses and the burning bush [holy ground] and revelations 21 [holy city]. we cordoned off the middle section of the basement with danger tape, and put up no standing signs. underneath the danger tape we had a strip of clear tape, on which were written some questions and reflections about moses’ story.

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we looped videos of redemptive acts in cities, moments when cities have become holy ground - the protest in Tiananmen Square back in 1989, burmese monks leadings protests in rangoon, the tearing down of the berlin wall. these were shown on ipods; the frames which held the ipods were also wrapped in danger tape [mike made fantastic frames for the ipods - i'll get him to post instructions for how to make them].

we projected videos from around the city onto walls around the basement, all of them long loops - people coming out of parliament station in the morning peak hour, a video shot at ground level of people walking down a laneway, and another taken while walking through city streets. a video of degraves lane at lunch time was projected onto the ceiling of the basement. it was quite distorted, and looked fantastic.

we wanted to highlight the idea that there are already glimpses of redemption and transformation in the city, to recognise the beauty in the ordinary, to get people to look at the city differently.

we wrote words onto the walls and floor with chalk and charcoal… a reflective piece about the laneways [which are melbourne's heartbeat], a rewriting of Doug Gay’s ‘holy city’ piece from alternative worship, a couple of other things.

in the laneway:

a first kiss
a last hit
somewhere to
sleep
fuck
hide

the crush of bottles
thrown in rage
boredom
defeat

and sweaty bodies making out
after one too many drinks at the pub.

concrete and bitumen
coloured by layers of grime
and the prophetic utterances of graffiti artists

security cameras that swivel
to catch the shouted arguments
and thrown punches

and miss
the lost dreams
and shattered hopes

it feels like we’re getting the hang of the space now. duncan macleod asked me to say a bit about the space during his elective yesterday, and i talked about how this is the first space i’ve worked with which is inflexible. you can’t bend the basement, you can’t pretend it’s something it’s not. you have to work with it. and when you do, it takes on a life of its own. it’s absolutely my favourite space to work with.

blythe and sam were fabulous companions in the whole experience… and thanks especially to dave, mike and lisa who came and plugged in data projectors [we work with only 3 single powerpoints in the basement], gaffer taped leads, wrote things on walls, shifted spare doors, ladders, broken chairs, etc… to Darren who was simply brilliant in the clean up, to Glen, Duncan, Mark and Al who came and ran electives - and especially to Age who organised the cafe and the Stop the Traffik action.

we were thinking today that maybe easter next year we’d do a four day thing in the basement for anyone who’s interested in exploration installation and sacred spaces… start with nothing and over the weekend gradually build up ideas after immersing ourselves in the space. we could open it to the public on the monday. i think we’ll ask mark pierson to come back and play with us…

i got to see nothing else of the forge festival… all i really wanted to do was hear sally morgenthaler, but that simply didn’t happen. it was a pretty intense weekend… i’m having a few days off… see you on return.

coming up in 2008…

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

it hasn’t slipped my attention that a quarter of the year has passed before I’m putting this up… there barely seems time at the moment to take a breath.

Easter: we’re not doing anything, for many reasons… but the Urban Seed guys let me know about a Stations of the Cross which will be happening at Mission to the Seafarers. Via Crucis @ Docklands 2008 will include art and multi-sensory, interactive worship stations based upon the Easter stories. The space will be open for personal reflection from midday on Maundy Thursday, 18th March. The exhibit will close on the evening of Good Friday, 19th March with a Reflective Worship Service commencing at 8pm.

The next public thing we’re working on is a basement space for the Forge Grassroots conference. After that we move into communal justice workshops, then a workshop in May for the Progressive Christian Network… At the end of May Jonny Baker arrives in melbourne to speak at the Urban Ministry Conference, and he’s also participating in the Alternative Worship Nosh [registrations are coming in for that - we've got limited places, so sign up soon if you plan to come].

Some of you will have heard that Pete Rollins was coming out in September - we’ve changed that date to February / March next year, in order to not clash with everything else that’s happening in September [and to be able to take a breath, post-greenbelt], and because we’re planning some fabulous things for Lent next year, which will be topped off with Pete’s visit.

The Docklands space is back on the agenda, the communal justice project is ramping up, i’m working with a new school development which is designing a ‘ministry centre’ / sacred space from scratch, and i’ve got an idea for next year’s holy week and this year’s christmas…

Today I’m working on worship / reflection spaces at the UnitingCare national conference in a couple of weeks - UnitingCare is the umbrella for the various agencies that are part of the uniting church [the uniting church is the largest non-government provider of welfare in australia]. this is my favourite kind of ‘audience’ - a large number of them wouldn’t define themselves as christian. i love having to look for new language…

welcome to this space

maybe you are here because you recognise in your own story
a greater story
one spoken since the beginning of time
by prophets, preachers and peacemakers
of God who calls all humankind to
liberation and wholeness.

if so, welcome to this space.

maybe you are here, not defined by a relationship with god
but nonetheless as someone with a deep conviction
that there is no inevitable unfolding to anyone’s life
but that our futures are yet to be written
and can be shaped by justice and compassion.

if so, welcome to this space.

maybe you are here because you have glimpsed
a moment of love that is beyond human reach
the grace that lies just beyond our finger tips
unexpected and beautiful
that transforms the ugly into breathtaking
the impossible into the real

if so, welcome to this space.

maybe you are here tired
no longer sure whether you belong
or how any of this makes a difference
struggling to remember the vision that inspired you
and to find the passion that eludes you

you too are welcome to this space…

things were so busy yesterday that the only possible thing to do was to take off and go and wander around the NGV for a couple of hours. thanks to sue for pointing me in the direction of a new installation… can’t wait to use this somewhere… it was a ladder made out of tubes of LED lights, hanging between two mirrors, one placed on the floor, one on the ceiling [about 3 m apart]. if you stand over the mirror, the ladder reaches up or down forever. it sounds mundane, it’s actually quite amazing.

and thanks to Kathy for pointing me towards Proyecto para un memorial (Project for a Memorial) - five video projections, each of a different face being painted with water on concrete, slowing disappearing in heat. the idea ties in beautifully with ecclesiastes ‘vanity, all is vanity’, which i’m using for the Uniting Care conference…

sorry

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

we went down to federation square this morning to watch the federal government’s apology to indigenous people on the big screen.

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last time i was at fed square with a group this size was when we were protesting some of the policies of the last government. it was unbelievably good to be listening to a prime minister who was speaking about soul, not economics. It was a moving and beautiful moment - obviously even more so for the indigenous people in the crowd, and those who were part of the ceremony in Canberra.

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it’s funny how in christian circles the concept of forgiveness is so dominant in much theology. the demand to forgive can become as oppressive as the original act that needed to be forgiven. we rarely, if ever, talk about apologising [which is very different to confessing]… and yet today seems proof [if we needed it] of how good it does one’s soul to apologise, and to do so without demanding forgiveness in response.

The photo below was taken during the Leader of the Opposition, Brendan Nelson’s, response. Most of the crowd at Federation Square turned their back on him during his speech. His speech, and the apology within it, felt to me like the kind of apology that a 10 year old gives his sister on the insistence of his mother.

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One of the things that Kevin Rudd said in his speech accompanying the apology was that turning points aren’t born through sentimental moments, they’re born through action. and that’s the task ahead of us from here.

coming soon: christmas 07

Monday, November 19th, 2007

in the basement, sunday december 23, 3-6pm

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