Saturday, July 26, 2008
Hi Everyone
...please be invited to 'under the banyan tree', the group exhibition i am in, inspired by a 6 week artist residency in india late last year and supported by the helpmann academy. other artists are gus clutterbuck, marie littlewood, fran callen, laura wills, meghan o'rourke, and peter fraser. it opens on wednesday 30th july 6-8pm, at the light square gallery, adelaide centre for the arts, adelaide. i'd love to see you all there, it will be a fun night...:) sam jeffries
Under the Banyan Tree
Launch by Professor Pal Ahluwalia
6 - 8pm Wednesday July 30
July 30 - August 14
ADELAIDE CENTRE FOR THE ARTSLight Square Gallery
39 Light Square Adelaide
Friday, July 25, 2008
Port Art
SOLD OUT
reflections on port adelaide
Sarah-Jane Cook
Lucy Thurley
Branwen Davies
Bryan Tingey
& others
August 2 - August 17
Launch by Rex Munn on August 2 at 3pm
PORT ADELAIDE SAILING CLUB
Corner Jenkins and Nelson Streets
Birkenhead
GALLERY HOURS
Wednesday - Sunday 11am - 5pm
PRESENTED BY PORT ADELAIDE ARTISTS FORUM INC.
Enquiries 0400 746 449
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Up and Coming
Three Rituals
amira.h.
SEPTEMBER 24 - NOVEMBER 2
live performance on opening night wednesday 24th september 6 - 8pm
THE PROJECT SPACE
Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia
14 Porter Street Parkside
GALLERY HOURS
Tuesday - Friday 11am - 5pm
Weekends 1pm - 5pm
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Conference: call for papers
Photo: Birkenhead "Public Art" © BBox
Did you know that Ruth Fazakerley publishes a great (FREE) Public Art Research Bulletin that canvasses current Australian public art projects, practice, events, policy, and research directions; providing links with current international research and practice? How good is that!
Check it out:
Public Art Research Online
Subscribe:
Receive the Public Art Research Bulletin (FREE) - via EMAIL
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS - Deadline 31 JULY 2008
Community, Health and the Arts
CONFERENCE 5-7 SEPTEMBER 2008
UNESCO OBSERVATORY
Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning
The University of Melbourne
Vital Arts – Vibrant Communities
Conference 5-7 September 2008
Today there is increasing awareness that the arts play a crucial role in improving the health and social wellbeing of communities. Over fifty years ago, the World Health Organisation proposed that health is not merely the absence of illness but a complete state of physical, mental and social wellbeing dependent on a range of elements physical, psychological and social. We now know that cultural practice is significant among these factors. Whether we observe performing artists allied with youth workers to tackle homelessness, the rise of patient-focused architecture in public hospitals, or the use of arts education to promote health in schools, we see compelling evidence that the arts can have a considerable impact on social and institutional life.
As the therapeutic and transformative possibilities of arts programs continue to attract interest from practitioners in diverse fields, the importance of multi-disciplinary research and collaboration is increasingly apparent. The achievements of such partnerships can often go unrecognised or undocumented in research, policy and analysis.
The aims of this conference are:
To bring together people with shared interests in the arts in order to encourage activities that cross disciplinary divisions, to exchange knowledge and inspire creative partnerships;
To gather credible evidence about the contribution made by the arts to community health;
To develop approaches which embed the arts within health policy and planning.
*/CALL FOR PAPERS: Deadline 31 JULY 2008
-----------------------------------------------
The UNESCO Observatory welcomes 15-minute papers that address the following themes:
Healthcare and social therapy: insights and observations gathered from arts programs in education, healthcare, community development, youth services, alternative health practice, disabilities and access.
Public space and the built environment: insights and observations gathered from design and architecture programs in hospitals, parks, community centres and other public spaces.
Cross cultural arts programs: contributions to indigenous arts, planning and health care. Observations and insights from community development in Asia and the Pacific.
Strategy and methodology: ideas for developing collaborations in multi-disciplinary research and programs. Strategies for developing networks, opportunities and support for artists working in the health sector. Insights on method for evaluating health-arts programs.
ABSTRACTS should be of 250 words for a 15-minute paper with a 200-word biography.
Forward submissions to the Conference Director:
Lindy Joubert, C/O Helen McNab
by Thursday 31 July 2008.
Further Information:
Helen McNab
T: +61 03 8344 9026 Monday to Wednesday 9:30 am – 3:00pm
F: +61 03 9503 0720 7 days, all hours
E: helenem@unimelb.edu.au
Public Art Research Online is the webpage of Ruth Fazakerley, an artist and researcher based in Adelaide, South Australia.
All text sourced from the Public Art Research Bulletin.
Monday, July 7, 2008
AWOHL Skank
Whatever Happened to Skanky Jane?
The Artswipe 2007.
The Artswipe 2007.
Apologies for the protracted hiatus dearest reader but The BBox Crew simply cannot function without the erroneous guidance of our Editor in Chief Skanky Jane who, subsequent to the contraction of an equally protracted disease, has gone AWOHL (Aimlessly Wandering On Her Lonesome). We promise that irregular posting will resume if and when the skank returns.
If you have any information as to Skanky Jane's whereabouts, please contact your local Grime Stoppersagency or, alternatively, get in touch with us at: janeskanky[at]yahoo[dot]com[dot]au.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)