CREATIVITY MOVES | ISSUE #1

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JAN/FEB/MAR 2011 CARRIAGEWORKS IDENTITY + CULTURE MOVES CREATIVITY

description

CREATIVITY MOVES is CarriageWorks' free, grass-roots community newsprint. Housed in the old Eveleigh Rail Yards, the CarriageWorks site has been a place of movement, since its earliest days. Today, CarriageWorks is home to artistic exploration, creative collaboration, individual expression and collective experience. The 2011 Program has been designed to open up new opportunities to bring creativity, in all its forms, to as many people as possible. We invite you to make CarriageWorks yours, and share the experience with us.

Transcript of CREATIVITY MOVES | ISSUE #1

Page 1: CREATIVITY MOVES | ISSUE #1

jan/feb/mar 2011Carriageworks

iDenTiTY + CULTUre

movesCreaTiviTY

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14. resiDenT sTaLker4. jamie Dawson 8. CreaTiviTY moves

© 2011 CARRIAGEWORKSCarriageWorks seeks to engage the local community with inspiring, contemporary arts and culture in all its forms. CarriageWorks’ program of events is

supported by NSW State Government through Arts NSW, and through CarriageWorks’ venue hire. To find out more about what CarriageWorks does or what’s on for the year ahead, visit www.carriageworks.com.au

CarriageWorks’ Executive Producer, Jamie Dawson shares his musings on why a world without creativity is no world for him.

6. 2010 HigHLigHTsAs we get ready to ramp it up for 2011, take a look back with us at the incredible year that was...

10. HiP HoP + iDenTiTYLocal hip hop veteran Matt ‘Mistery’ looks at the subculture of hip hop and its role in forging identity and community.

15. HaPPeningsJan – Mar at CarriageWorks is pretty much just packed full of awesomeness. Don’t miss a minute.

We look at the power of creativity and how it triggers our senses, peaks our curiosity, stirs our emotions and always leaves us with more than we started with.

Concrete Playground’s Lucy Rose Fokkema enters the stilted world of Stalker, to talkabout creativity and the human experience.

niCk basseTT / PHoTograPHerCover shot by Nick Bassett, featuring B*Boy Blond. Cover shoot B*Boy Blond, Luke Mercado & B*Girl Illiana. We love Nick Bassett’s awesome hip hop photography. Nick’s photographic series Icons was exhibited at CarriageWorks for Platform Hip Hop Festival in 2010. CarriageWorks has commissioned a new work, Power Moves, to be showcased at this year’s Platform. Power Moves looks at the form, strength and skill of breaking.17 Mar - 09 Apr

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CreaTiviTY maTTers beCaUse wiTHoUT iT THere’D be no originaL THoUgHT, no new iDeas, no LeaDersHiP, no Progression, no CommUniTY, no emPaTHY, no exPression... no fUnCTion. jamie

DawsonWhat does creativity mean to you?It’s being able to take a unique perspective and develop it so others can understand. It’s envisioning what isn’t and being able to make it happen. In 1893 Lawrence Hargrave stood on a beach of a tiny village at the base of the Royal National Park and, against all perceptions of insanity, said ‘I’m gonna fly’. He built a box kite, strapped himself in with piano wire, and was the first person to experience the pure freedom that only birds can truly know – that’s creativity.

Everyone can be creative – in every facet of their life. Being an artist and being creative are not the same thing. Not everyone can be an artist, in fact very few people can, but everyone should endeavour to be creative – the world would be a much more productive and passionate place.

What is a creative experience in your life that has moved you?When I lived in Scotland I had the opportunity to work with a bunch of ‘at risk’ young men in a hideous place called Dedridge. I spent a couple of days a week in ‘creative expression’ (the school’s words, not mine) as part of an alternative curriculum stream. At the start of the program I asked them what it meant to be creative. The one person to answer said ‘everything we’re not’. For the next twenty weeks we played drama games, paint ball, visually mapped alternative skate board routes to school, painted, had knives pulled on us, made music, made films, lost one member to juvenile detention and one to gang violence, drew, walked, laughed, talked and, finally, shot a doco telling their stories. I asked them again at the end, what it meant to be creative. The same kid said ‘It’s the mindset that gives you hope that one day you’ll get out of this shithole’. Every day since I have thought about those guys...

Why do you think communities need creativity?Communities need to be able to express themselves creatively and to celebrate creativity in all its forms. Creativity has been integral to the existence of every group of people that has ever walked the earth

and is vital to the preservation of culture and history. A community’s capacity to be creative directly reflects the political, social and environmental climate they are living in. At a base level, I really believe people need to connect, they need to share some sort of understanding, to know they are a part of something bigger, something real. Places like CarriageWorks provide a conduit for that to happen.

Australian creativity and creative culture is....?Strong, vibrant, exciting, growing, quickly developing its own voice. We are in a really good place. Nothing is perfect and I think contemporary creative activity in this country is trying to move away from where its influence has been, to where it should be - events like Darwin Festival, The Dreaming and Woodford, as well as companies like Erth, Marrugeku and Version 1.0, are amongst many providing inspiration in the development of collaborative, exploratory, community based expression across a wide consciousness. Culturally, it seems like we are almost over our self deprecating cringe and starting to embrace the fact that there has always been amazing work being developed on these lands. I’m really enjoying working in the Arts at this time.

Your ideal experience of creativity and community would be?Anytime a community comes together to actively participate in and celebrate creativity it is going to be something I love. If, through that, you can facilitate positive social change, it then becomes my absolute ideal. I love to explore creative experiences where people get their chance to contribute, where it is open and genuinely accessible to people at all levels where people are comfortable enough to be challenged and to challenge.

A world without creativity would be?Impossible.

exeCUTive ProDUCer / Cw

Read more from Jamie at carriageworks.tumblr.com

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2010The year that was... 2010 at CarriageWorks was a memorable year of amazing events that pushed the boundaries of artistic exploration, creative collaboration, individual expression and collective experience. We hope you took some risks, had some fun, shared your ideas with us, and tried something you’d never done before. Let’s kick off 2011 the same way...

CONTEMPORARY.Pushing the limits with the

Rabble’s Cageling.

CAPTIVATING.Q&A session with cult DIY filmmakers at

Shoot The Player.

PERSONAL.Trading sustainable ideas at the

Kitchen Garden Project.

MOTIVATING.Pedal power at the Sustainability Expo.

PLAYFUL.Capturing crazy moments at

The Finders Keepers.

WHIMSICAL.Making magic with mushrooms at

the live music stage.

WONDERFUL.Imagination comes to life at the Sydney

Children’s Festival.

AGELESS.Learning to stiltwalk at the Sydney

Children’s Festival.

COLLECTIVE.Enjoying a colourful community at

CarriageARTWorks.

SOULFUL.Discovering local talent and enjoying

accoustic rhythms at Winterland festival.

LOCAL.Sampling produce at the

Taste Trail Cooking Adventure Workshop.

UNEXPECTED.Dynamic art from the city’s fringe.

PROVOCATIVE.Fearless B*Boy battles at Platform Hip Hop Festival.

ABSTRACT.Savouring quirky gems with Elbow Room’s

A Tiny Chorus at the Sydney Fringe.

CLASSIC.Swapping vintage faves at Rethreads.

TIMELESS.Getting down to the knitty gritty at

Crafternoon.

REFLECTIVE.Dreaming of everything! on the Wishing Wall at the Sydney Children’s Festival.

SILLY.Letting loose Blues-Brothers style

at WrongProm.

LIVE.Watching resident company Force Majeure’s live performance of Not In A Million Years.

CONNECTED.Ideas worth spreading at TEDx Sydney.

EVOCATIVE.Scoping street art as part of

Graffiti & Street Art Walking Tours.

ECCLECTIC.Browsing for designer delights at

The Finders Keepers design & art markets.

HaPPenings + HigHLigHTs

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2011moves...

Creativ

ity m

oves

us

forward

. It o

pen

us u

p. It

expo

ses

us to

new

ideas

... to

each

othe

r... a

nd m

aybe

mos

t impo

rtantl

y... t

o ou

rselve

s.

Creativ

ity c

an sh

ift ho

w we

think

and

shap

e who

we

are. It

can

unfo

ld

us a

nd b

ring

us to

gethe

r. It

can

confu

se o

r con

found

us,

trans

port

or

trans

form u

s, ev

oke

or p

rovo

ke u

s, inf

uriate

or e

levate

us.

Creativ

ity

is ne

ver n

eutra

l. It

is rar

ely s

till. I

t has

a p

ulse

and

a he

artbe

at an

d

reach

es o

ut to

enga

ge u

s. It

trigge

rs ou

r sen

ses,

peak

s ou

r curi

osity

,

stirs

our e

motion

s and

alway

s lea

ves u

s with

mor

e tha

n we s

tarted

with

.

Creativ

ity M

oves

.

CreaTiviTY

Creativ

ity is

eve

rywhe

re. It

’s a

part

of who

we

are, h

ow w

e thi

nk,

how w

e live

life,

and

how w

e mak

e sen

se of

thing

s. Crea

tivity

unde

rpins

expr

essio

n, or

igina

lity an

d pr

ogres

sion,

and

stirs

imag

inatio

n an

d

unde

rstan

ding.

Creativ

ity is

how w

e drea

m up w

hat is

n’t an

d brin

g it to

life.

Creativ

ity ha

s spu

rred g

reat m

inds t

o env

ision

amaz

ing th

ings f

or ou

r worl

d

since

the

begin

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of tim

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s the

share

d lan

guag

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artist

s, write

rs,

danc

ers, ac

tors, m

usici

ans, d

esign

ers an

d thin

kers.

Yet a

lso liv

es ins

ide ev

ery

single

one o

f us.

Creativ

ity ca

n tak

e us t

o fan

tastic

al wor

lds an

d unk

nown

unive

rses,

or b

e fou

nd in

the

most o

rdina

ry of

momen

ts an

d pla

ces.

It can

come s

ilentl

y or li

ke a t

hund

er cla

p, an

d be j

ust fo

r us,

or sh

ared w

ith

others

. It liv

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mewhe

re be

twee

n the

‘wha

t if...?

’ and

the ‘

I cou

ld...?

and i

s whe

re po

ssibi

lity be

gins..

.

House

d in t

he ol

d Eve

leigh

Rail

Yard

s, the

Carr

iageW

orks

site

has b

een a

place

of m

ovem

ent, s

ince i

ts ea

rliest

days

. Tod

ay, C

arriag

eWor

ks is

home

to art

istic

explo

ration

, crea

tive

colla

borat

ion, i

ndivi

dual

expr

essio

n an

d

colle

ctive

expe

rienc

e. Th

e 2011 P

rogr

am ha

s bee

n des

igned

to op

en up

new o

ppor

tunitie

s to

bring

crea

tivity

, in a

ll its

forms,

to as

man

y peo

ple

as p

ossib

le. W

e inv

ite yo

u to

make

Carriag

eWor

ks yo

urs, a

nd sh

are th

e

expe

rienc

e with

us.

PeoPLe

Creativ

ity is

for e

veryo

ne. I

t is

not e

xclus

ive. T

here

is no

club

or

secre

t cod

e to

crack

. No

obsc

ure p

uzzle

to d

eciph

er or

gen

etic

pre-d

ispos

ition

to wish

for.

If yo

u are

hum

an, y

ou a

re cre

ative

.

Being

human

equip

s us

with ev

erythi

ng we

need

to fee

l,

to ex

pres

s, to

relate

, to

unde

rstan

d, to

imag

ine a

nd to

crea

te.

Creativ

ity is

integ

ral to

human

exist

ence

. Our

lives

are o

ur cre

ative

act.

Get mak

ing!

CULTUres

Creativ

ity sh

ows u

s who

we a

re. It

mirrors

how w

e thin

k, an

d wha

t

we care

abou

t. It c

halle

nges

wha

t is, a

nd qu

estio

ns w

hat c

ould

be.

Creativ

ity h

as s

hown

us o

urselv

es, i

n ev

ery m

omen

t ove

r tim

e.

It is

a liv

ing re

cord

of t

he w

ay w

e ha

ve liv

ed a

nd g

rown

togeth

er

throu

ghou

t hist

ory.

It link

s us t

o our

past

and m

oves

us to

our fu

ture.

Creativ

ity le

ts us

explo

re tog

ether

how w

e can

be m

ore.

CommUniTies

Creativ

ity

conn

ects

us.

Creativ

ity

is un

iversa

l an

d ow

ned

by ev

eryon

e. It’s

someth

ing we

share

and

are all

part

of.

Creativ

ity en

large

s us a

nd lin

ks us

in to

be pa

rt of s

ometh

ing bi

gger.

Creativ

ity gr

ows a

nd sp

reads

from pe

rson t

o pers

on, m

ultipl

ying i

deas

and i

nspir

ation

as it

moves

. Just

by be

ing pa

rt of th

e wide

r com

munity

,

we are

feedin

g coll

ectiv

e crea

tivity

and s

hared

human

expe

rienc

e.

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b-boYb-girL

maTT ‘misTerY’ on HiP HoP + iDenTiTY2011 marks the 20th anniversary of the iconic I Have A Dream mural painted by Andrew Aiken and Julie Pryor in King Street, Newtown. The message of this mural is still poignant, moving, and relevant to issues plaguing the world. Some rays of hope can be seen in the strangest of places.

The hip hop subculture was born out of the African American civil rights movement, and in many ways it has been useful in seeing the ideals of Martin Luther King’s 1963 speech ‘I Have A Dream’ come to fruition through it. Hip hop began with the disenfranchised youth of the New York ghettos in the 1970s, but can now be found in every corner of the globe. Its voice and message has resonated with people from all walks of life who relate to the struggle and injustices it speaks of. The various disciplines of hip hop have also served to entice new initiates.

I was originally drawn to hip hop when I saw breaking for the first time in the music video for Buffalo Gals by Malcolm McLaren. The clip featured the legendary breakers Rock Steady Crew as well as graffiti, DJs and rapping. For a bogan kid from Sydney’s western suburbs, this was new and radical stuff. My friends and I started to mimic what we saw in movies and videos, seeking out any sources for learning more about this new form of expression. Little did we know that some of us would be still involved in this movement some 30 years later!

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if an inDiviDUaL Can Do a DoPe move or kiCk a maD rHYme on THe miC, He or sHe insTanTLY gains resPeCT. regarDLess of wHere PeoPLe Have Come from, or wHo THeY are, THeY’LL Have a new iDenTiTY wiTHin THe CULTUre.

Hip hop contains underlying messages of social justice and rebellion against the system. It also promotes, as hip hop pioneer Afrika Bambaataa (aka Bam) says, ‘peace, unity, love and having fun’. This simple message is deeper than it first appears. Adding the phrase ‘having fun’ at the end lightens the mood and makes the first three goals seem more easily attainable. Peace, unity and love are ideals which often seem too hard to achieve, but if people are having fun along the way then they’re probably more likely to give it a go.

Bam was originally a member of the South Bronx street gang the Black Spades. He began DJing in hip hop’s early years, forming the hip hop organisation Universal Zulu Nation. He also introduced the ‘knowledge of self’ concept into hip hop culture - a concept that Zulu Nation still continues to promote today. ‘Knowledge of self’ means knowing who you are, knowing where you’ve come from, understanding your environment and expressing yourself in a pure and true way that benefits your neighbours.

Ironically, a lot of the original tenets of hip hop’s founding fathers appear to have been overtaken by an opposite way of thinking. The promotion of gangstaism, materialism, sexism, and even subtle racism has influenced what most people consider hip hop. The deviation is understandable from a marketing point of view, as it’s easier to tell a lie than to face the truth. Sadly, many young people have lost their lives in an attempt to live up to a false stereotype perpetuated by the marketing of commercial rap.

Fortunately, hip hop in its true essence still exists and thrives all over the planet. One of the cool things about the real subculture is that it’s not about race, socio-economic status, age, gender or any other superficial factor. It’s based on two main factors - personal skill, and appreciation of the skills of others. If an individual can do a dope move or kick a mad rhyme on the mic, he or she instantly gains respect. Regardless of where people have come from, or who they are, they’ll have a new identity within the culture.

My love of hip hop and the elements that I represent has opened doors for me all around the world. If I’m in a strange overseas destination and a local graffiti artist sees some of my graffiti flicks, before I know it, I’m part of the family. This also happens to me in my capacity as a B*Boy and as an MC. The jamming mentality is deeply entrenched in the hip hop movement, and is one of its most endearing features.

Added to the underlying camaraderie of hip hop is the longing to express and to hear people’s individual stories and experiences. True hip hop discourages emulation but encourages individualism. It also encourages the introduction of other cultural influences which has served to enrich the development of hip hop as a global movement. I love listening to hip hop music that has rapping in languages that I don’t understand - I love that you can hear the passion, heart, and vibe of a voice and gain some insight into how a person feels in a culture that is completely different. When I’ve performed tracks in the USA, American hip hop heads have loved the vibe, in particular hearing rapping in the distinct Australian accent. Hip hop always has something new and fresh to bring to the world.

Near the end of King’s ‘I Have A Dream’ speech he expresses the hope that one day the situation will be changed so that little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls and walk together as sisters and brothers. This ideal can be witnessed today at numerous hip hop jams, breaking cyphers, graffiti walls and DJ battles all around the world.

People coming together to express themselves through the common medium of hip hop has broken down many barriers. There are infinite stories to be heard on this planet and since the beginning of time, art has served to achieve this. In our present era you’d be hard pressed to find such a powerful voice for the common person as hip hop.

Keep it real. _maTT ‘misTerY’is a local hip hop veteran, graff artist, and coordinator of CarriageWorks’ Grafitti & Street Art Walking Tours.

Above: I AM Hip Hop - Lil Wayne,Platform Hip Hop Festival crowdRight: Hip hop fans enjoying some mad moves, Platform Hip Hop Festival, No Stopping - B*Girl IllianaPrevious: Radical Son & Bravo Child

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er?

Taking its name from a 1970s Russian sci-fi film, helmed by two New Zealanders living in Australia, performing to audiences everywhere from Holland to Venezuela and overseeing an indigenous physical theatre company in the remote outback, Stalker Theatre Company certainly gets around.

Established in 1989 and first attracting international attention for its work with stilts, Stalker (co-artistic directed by Rachel Swain and David Clarkson) has since become Australia’s pre-eminent physical theatre company. With works like Stiltbreak, Red and hip hop inflected Elevate, the company has a well-earned rep for innovative, interdisciplinary and inter-cultural productions.

With a creative focus on reflecting significant issues of the human experience, Stalker draws on the power of different art forms to create individual stories with themes the world can feel and relate to. Performed at Carriageworks’ Platform Hip Hop Festival, Elevate (the sequel to fusion work StiltBreak which has been performed around the world more than 80 times to great acclaim) is a fusion of break dance, hip hop and stilt acrobtics, complete with a five metre high catapult.

Stalker’s co-Artistic Director David Clarkson hatched the concept of fusing hell-for-leather stilt acrobatics and hip hop in 2001, after noticing the similarities between the two styles as he watched break dancers at a festival in Boulder, Colorado. ‘David wanted to explore new ways of working, to keep the physical theatre form alive, and keep it contemporary’ explains general manager Tegan Richardson. Returning to Australia, Clarkson taught stilt workshops at a local high school where students experimented with their own hip hop fusion. ‘Hip hop is the stuff they identify with, its an immediately accessible form’. Inspired by the rich vocabulary and powerful language of hip hop, Stalker created the full length stilt/breakdance work that is Elevate.

ComPanY in resiDenCe aT Carriageworks

bY ConCreTe PLaYgroUnD’s LUCY rose fokkema

TaLkLET S

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sUPPorTeD bYProDUCeD bY PHoTograPHers

01easT LonDon wesT sYDneY25 Jan – 30 JanPresented by Information and Cultural Exchange (ICE) and The British Council in association with Sydney Festival and CarriageWorks. Hip hop artists from London and Sydney smash inner city stereotypes.

02Carriageworks exHibiTion sUbTexT: arT for LiTeraCY17 Feb – 05 MarPresented by The Australian Literacy & Numeracy Foundation in association with CarriageWorks. An exhibition of work by prominent Australian artists and students from Lurnea High School.

03UnPLUggeD+UnComPLiCaTeDLive mUsiC+Carriageworks 26 Feb, nooon-5pmProduced by CarriageWorks Programmed by Music For TreesFree afternoon of local music talent, featuring Liz Martin, BhangLassi, The Brutal Poodles, Emad Younan, and James Brennan of Theatre of Disco fame.

04Carriageworks exHibiTionPower moves17 Mar – 09 MarCommissioned & Produced by CarriageWorksPowerful photographic exhibition by Nick Bassett that looks at the form, strength and skill of breakdancing.

05Carriageworks’PLaTform HiP HoP fesTivaL12 Mar – 02 AprProduced by CarriageWorks Artistic Director Nick Power Four weeks of high powered hip hop action, including a massive line up of the best in local, interstate and international hip hop talent.

06fUnk iT UP aboUT noTHin’16 Mar – 26 MarPresented by CarriageWorks’ Platform Hip Hop FestivalA hip hop theatre production produced by Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Merrigong Theatre Company and Richard Jordan Productions.

NICK BASSETT / BRETT BOARDMAN DECLAN KUCH / CAMERON MILLS KEITH SAUNDERS / LISA TOMASETTI PRUDENCE UPTON / CONAN WHITEHOUSE

ConTribUTors

08THe magnifiCenTsraHZeL, sUPernaTUraL & Dj js-1 wiTH kooLism & THe narCiCYsT 02 Apr, from 6.30pmPresented by CarriageWorks’ Platform Hip Hop FestivalExpect a full bag of tricks from this powerhouse of international hip hop talent.

07UnPLUggeD+UnComPLiCaTeDLive mUsiC+Carriageworks 26 Mar, noon-5pmProduced by CarriageWorksFree afternoon of local music talent featuring The Falls, Rosie Catalano, Melanie Horsnell and Missing Children.

CreaTive DeveLoPmenT jUmP: naTionaL menToring ProgramSupported by the Australia Council for the Arts, managed nationally by YAQ NSW Delivery Partner CarriageWorks

We’re thrilled to be working with the eight NSW artists selected for the 2011 JUMP National Mentoring Program for Young and Emerging Artists. CarriageWorks will work with the mentees and their mentors to guide and manage their 10-month program experience. Check out our blog to follow the road with them at www.carriageworks.tumblr.com

HaPPenings _jan/feb/mar