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Amy T

Celebrating 15 years of creative practice (and winters in Ballarat!)

By Arts

It’s a wintery restful weekend here and I am here thinking of Sappho, the Ancient Greek poet known for her lyric poetry written to be sung to music. I am writing a piece ‘seeking after’ her and remembering that it is fifteen years since we moved to Ballarat, and fifteen years since a motley crew of artists came together as Weave Length Productions for a time, and put on our first work- A Tale of Winged Things- inspired by the poetry fragments of Sappho and of the challenges of language. The promotional flyer (designed by Julian as many of the early projects were) had her words in typewriter print:

Dripping scream shook her mind until the light    became a voice & spoke for the first time

The show involved cross-artform collaboration, music, poetry, books, photography, projection, archives, time, communication and playing with the traditional theatre space, things that continue to interest and inspire me. (My honours thesis was called Translating Spaces, my Masters one was Sensing Spaces, and my PhD was essentially Activating Spaces, get me those spaces!).

Soon after that collaborative production in 2009, in our mid-twenties, and following time spent living and studying overseas, Julian and I moved from a mouldy sharehouse in Brunswick, inner city Melbourne, to our own little asbestos clad home in Ballarat, regional Victoria. (This was with financial help from a parent of course, the only way any of us can get anywhere near property these days- and looking back it was somewhat against the tide, not that we were bothered). At that time everyone was saying why would you move to Ballarat?! Even we still had no concept of it, interchangeable with Bendigo and known only for gold panning visits in primary school. And it’s true that one of my early memories in B-town is ordering a peppermint tea at a café and causing a stir of consternation and confusion… my how far the Ballarat cafes have come ; )

Julian also reflects that we may have been more open to the idea having lived in a regional town outside of London (our first abode together!), taking the train into the big smoke to see shows and things, and riding bikes around the country for picnics when not working at the local pub (J) and studying books and theatre at the university (me).

On moving to Ballarat, I immersed myself in the local creative scene and followed my nose as I tend to do, producing works in old houses, train stations, streets, shop windows, and curating events and projects to bring people together around town and to bring places and stories to life in new ways. In more recent years I have also worked in the beautiful Otways and will share some more news about that soon! Perhaps in a Part 2 I will also reflect on how these years of practice have evolved into my work with the Australian Walking Artists and international creative network, an evolving wonder.

But for now- I share with you a creative project (or two) from each of the last 15 years. I would love to hear from you if you’d like to share your memories or thoughts on of any of them, any interesting threads you see, or any requests for what you’d like to see me do next! Huge thanks as ever to all those that make, enjoy and support art, the heart of life that helps us to feel, to connect, to explore and to flourish.

Adventures with the Australian Walking Artists

By Arts, Walking Arts

Hoping everyone is well in this wild world and sharing our kindness and creativity, and advocacy for humanity as best we can.

I turned 40 this month, so its been a big time of reflecting on how best to live and to be of service, plus of extreme gratitude for all the love and peace in my life.

    

As I look forward to new adventures with the newly formed network of ‘Australian Walking Artists‘ it has been fascinating to look back on my own creative wanderings, now well over a decade, and my cross art-form work and interests that have spanned site-specific theatre,  creative tours, podcasting, cultural heritage, collage, poetry and more, but always with a focus on the layers and inter-weavings of people and place, and led by heart and curiosity.

To have met a kindred world on my travels in Greece last year has led to being part of AWA  and our exciting group show Way Beyond at Articulate gallery in Sydney this month. A massive thanks to co-convenors of the group, exhibition curators and all round legends Molly Wagner and Kim V. Goldsmith for all their work pulling everything together. You can read their piece about the show recently shared on the awesome Walk Listen Create and if you’re in Sydney catch the show before it finishes this weekend!

and also join a talk Walk Listen Create are running tomorrow morning– 6AM Aus time- with some exciting news from our walking friends in Greece and Europe.

I consider myself more of a wanderer than any kind of hardcore ‘walker’, but the beauty of this network- and the field internationally- is it’s breadth and diversity.

Anything (so far as it’s driven by generosity, connection and curiosity) goes.  Molly hosted a hybrid live and online panel chat with some of the Way Beyond artists, including me that you can watch below, woohoo!

 

And a poem for you written last October:

There is room for everyone

Waking with these words on my tongue,

The question mark in my gut,

Longing for it to become-

Truth

Turf toiled with love

 

The garden party, the cities ruined by bombs,

The bears-who know no borders-

Poisoned and re pieced

By a team of those who don’t believe in extinction

but that co-existence might still be done

 

Un-kin, in foreign skins, but blood within

Let there be room for everyone

All creatures under the sun,

Hold space not ground

Flowers to the butts of guns

 

In prayers of peace, to all not some-

Let there be room for everyone

 

 

Audio and walking adventures with Heart Maps

By Arts, Audio, Heart Maps

What a journey it has been as I follow my nose and my heart with this project. And now it’s time to come and enjoy one of the outcomes!

Amy in Psarades looking at the triple border in the Prespa Lakes between Greece, Albania, and North Macedonia

Amy in Psarades, Prespa Lakes, looking over the triple border between Greece, Albania, and North Macedonia, July 2023

 

On the final weekend of Winter (August 25-27), Apollo Bay offers up WinterWild a feast of creative and delicious delights with this unique festival and the final event will be my Heart Maps audio adventure! This is one of the places where this year’s heart mapping has led, and I would so love for you to come and explore. A massive thanks to all my collaborators and participants who have joined along the way. And to Regional Arts Australia for funding my creative research fellowship that allowed development of this work.    AFTER NOTE- listen to audio and see photos from the event here! 

Heart Maps at WinterWild promotion

Across the WinterWild weekend there will be a free Heart Maps story trail available to wander and listen (and for people unable to be on site these can be listened to online too), as well as this ticketed event that will take people on a magic mystery tour around town. BYO smartphone and headphones for either!

Led by me and Gadubanud artist and Traditional Owner Richard Collopy, the audio stories and experience weave together local music, culture, archival sounds, oral histories and stories of local people and places: the unique ecology; of falling in love or having first beers on the beach; the cinema and dances; first telephones, and so much more. It invites people to think about how we move through this world and how we connect with places and with each other.

Listen here

This was Jade and I walking the route last week:

Site of Miss Penn's house, Apollo Bay

Site of Miss Penn’s house, Apollo Bay

Jade and doggie at the Apollo Bay Mech Hall

 

My Heart Map adventure this year has also taken me all the way to Greece! I have recently returned from travels visiting the village of my grandparents (Neret in Macedonian and Polipotamos in Greek) meaning where many rivers meet. This was incredibly moving, and while I didn’t meet any blood relations- my family having immigrated to Australia during the unrest in the 1940s- I was made to feel so welcome and feel Northern Greece in my bones.

The Artistic Station at Prespa, Walking Arts Conference 2023

The Artistic Station at Prespa, Walking Arts Conference 2023

The village of Neret/Polipotamos, Northern Greece

The village of Neret/Polipotamos, Northern Greece

I also had the amazing opportunity to attend a creative conference in nearby region of Prespa with an international crew of Walking Arts explorers presented by the Department of Fine and Applied Arts of the University of Western Macedonia.

It was a completely weird and wonderful and life-changing experience that is difficult to put into words so while I continue to process the experience I defer to my lovely articulate colleagues below. I also had the honour of presenting on my Otways Heart Maps project which included a video message from Richard which was so special for people to hear. Watch here, along with me reading a poem at the start of my presentation, inspired by walks done during Heart Maps workshops in Apollo Bay. All the synchronicity of criss-crossing journeys and stories and hearts, the joy!

Walking Arts Conference Day Laimos

Walking Arts Conference Day Laimos

Cartographies panel at conference: Miguel, Anna, Amy. Natacha, Dan

Cartographies panel at conference: Miguel, Anna, Amy. Natacha, Dan

Massive thanks to Walk Listen Create who got me onto this beautiful wild thing (note I’ve now entered the WinterWild walk into their yearly sound walk awards, exciting!), and an article on the conference here by Korina Farmakoris.

‘Walking meetings in Prespa’ For an active and restless part of the global artistic community, Prespa is already a point of reference, a laboratory of ideas and a place to which it wishes to return.

 

And some reflections from Patricia Miranda:

Patricia Miranda reflections on instagram.  

Amy doing Heart Maps presentation in Greece

Amy doing Heart Maps presentation in Greece (Pic by Sia)

 

Until we meet again!

Much love, Amy

Heart Mapping in the Otways

By Arts, Audio, Curation, Heart Maps, Heritage

It’s been a while! After years of being unsuccessful with the elusive State Library of Victoria Creative Fellowship program I am happy to say that I am deep within my very own Regional Arts Australia fellowship project as we speak. It’s called Heart Maps and it’s based in the beautiful Otways on Gadubanud Country: 6 months connecting with and researching the different layers of the region through people, place and collections, and working towards the creation of a new audio theatre work, woohoo!

I am feeling so honoured to bring together a crack team- Traditional Owner Richard Collopy as cultural advisor and collaborator (see below for my story about him in The Otway Light), Apollo Bay arts legend Jade Forest, musician and producer Aimee Chapman, and the Apollo Bay Museum crew where I will be capturing oral histories, plus of course all the locals who get involved with the project.

I’m running some workshops this weekend at the cool Project Space in Apollo Bay and still have some spots left if anyone would like to join!

Book here

Heart Maps project logo and info Workshop Info

And learn more about the awesome work of Richard Collopy below:

The Talking Hut at Cape Otway Light Station (published in Issue 16 The Otway Light 03/06/22)

With Amy Tsilemanis

 “In the aboriginal worldview, everything is living. So everything is a manifestation of some other living part. And, of course, with objects that are made, then they’re made by somebody and invested from the person who’s making it and everyone who came before, like the ancestors…So what you make, why you make it, when you make it, is all part of this ancestral cycle of life.” –Margo Neale in First Knowledges ‘Design: Building on Country.’

I arrive through the paths of coastal ti-tree at the hut, alone but for a light rain and the birds. The hut is circular, hand-made with local materials and strangely welcoming amidst its empty, abandoned air. It has no doors, no locks, artefact cases holding only labels, and covered in a layer of disuse. One case reveals a message (a plea?) written with a fingertip through the dust: ‘Please re-open the Talking Hut. We need these spaces.’ I walk past the grime covered information sheets ‘Aboriginal Ground Edge Axes,’ ‘Aboriginal Coastal Shell Middens,’ a broken chair, a fire extinguisher, a Covid sign attached to a branch with a cable tie, greenery coming in through the round, open windows sculpted out of the hut itself, a place to sit half inside half outside. I see the old information board shoved into a makeshift cupboard that states ‘The shells are fragile, the story is precious.’ Empty as the hut appears, I know that there is life here yet. Like Margo Neale’s words above, life has been transferred into the walls, the spiral roof, and the walking track outside. This Talking Hut still has more to hear, more to say.

Today I am lucky to be meeting with the artist and builder behind this special place, Richard Collopy and family. They are Traditional Custodians, and when they arrive they show me a map on the wall of Victoria’s almost forty Indigenous language groups, explaining how Victoria is language rich due to the fertile land. They point out the southern Gunditj (groups) of the Otways area, all surviving.

Richard Collopy

Gadubanud Traditional Owner Richard Collopy inside The Talking Hut.  Cape Otway, 2022

We sit on the carved wooden seats around the fire pit. As we talk, the rainfall deepens. Despite the lack of a fire, there’s a sense of cosiness, of hearth, though also of something once lively, sleeping and dusted with days untouched, waiting for its moment to return. As Richard says, it is culture waiting to be reinvigorated. The hut has been closed since Covid disruptions at the Cape Otway Light Station and the Collopy’s are hopeful for a renewed relationship with the site as operations are handed over from private operators to the government body and public land manager Great Ocean Road Coast and Parks Authority (GORCAPA) next month.

Going back over a decade Richard tells me how “knowing that surrounding sites and this place were very unprotected, and with no profile for Aboriginal people, we sought a grant to put our presence here.” With their business they received a federal government grant to create a keeping place for significant cultural artefacts, the hut and a kilometre long walking track. Richard states that “supported by the Light Station business, we established a collective working group including individuals from variant indigenous families, community orgs and others. As Project Manager, this is a role I had experience in before.”

The project sought to bring together the complex threads of recognising the long history preceding European settlement, and the continuing lines of Traditional Custodians like the Gadubanud surviving, despite horrific massacres and displacement due to colonisation. There is much healing to be done, which involves truth-telling to correct historical narratives of ‘savagery’ and ‘extinction,’ and sharing the rich culture and knowledge of the world’s first peoples and their unique stories of the Cape Otway area. These were all drivers in creating the hut, and driving preservation of significant artefacts that tell these stories.

Talking Hut photo

The Talking Hut on a rainy day in 2022

So how did Richard go about building the Talking Hut and what are some of the ideas and symbols within?

“Once we decided to make something here, it took about a year and a half and a bit to see what you’ve got here. All done by hand with second-hand materials, up to thirty individuals helped. I loved building it, we had all our children here, some people that we’ve now lost, they’ve all touched it.” Richard tells the story of crawling on his knees through the bush to this spot where there was nothing, and of using his unique design and building process, where existing materials are shaped and reimagined through a person’s creativity, “tactile and sculptural.”

“I walked out here into the bush, there was nothing here, and I found a bunch of rubbish. There were bits of rock, there were hundreds of bottles, plenty of ti-tree that had to be cut.” Mixed with timber from his own property nearby, the hut was lovingly constructed, large enough for meetings, and inspired by traditional techniques where:

“In some larger huts a timber pole [tree] in the centre was turned upside down so that the roots would form the structure, rocks were built up to about a metre then the timber from the top joins down and the whole lot is covered in grass or sodden, like the thatched technique, then mud and every year your shells that you burn would go on, so they’d need to be re-rendered each year for thousands of years, and that gives it the sense of permanence. The huts are permanent, the people not so much, that’s the difference.”

Standing outside in the rain and looking at the hut I ask about the Y shape at the peak of the roof. Richard tells me about this symbol, in a shape like a whale’s tail: “it features in the hut, the entrance sign and on our clapsticks and this is about people helping each other. The symbology of that today is about the two cultures working together as one. That was the essence of that.”

I thank Richard very much for sharing his story and here’s to an exciting new phase at the Cape Otway Light Station. I will leave you with some of his brother’s wise words: “Relationships are at the basis of everything, and if we can get that right, things will prosper.” Cheers to that!

Gather Podcast and Gather Threads

By Arts, Gather podcast, Gather Threads

We wound up Season 1 of the podcast earlier this month  You can explore all 8 episodes here and we celebrated with a party featuring guests from the season and even the launch of a new creative collaboration- Gather Threads! The event was all Auslan interpreted which was awesome and all episodes are also now transcribed so please share and enjoy.

Amy & Erin chatting on stage at the Gather Party

Amy & Erin chatting on stage at the Gather Party, Amy wearing her own Gather Threads piece (Image by Tiffany Titshall)

Check out more photos from the Gather Podcast Party 

or watch the recording including AUSLAN and captions

and if you’ve enjoyed the podcast feel free to make a donation to go towards future work!

So what are Gather Threads?

Amy in a tree with a blue Gather Threads tshirt on

Amy in a tree with a blue Gather Threads t-shirt on (Image: Erin McCuskey)

Amy wears a pink Gather Threads t-shirt in her garden with artichokes

Amy wears a pink Gather Threads t-shirt in her garden with artichokes (Image: Erin McCuskey)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gather Threads is a new collaboration between artist Amy Tsilemanis and seamstress Christine Crawshaw, featuring Amy’s collages printed onto fabric and sewn onto recycled clothing.

The act of combining the printed collages with the colours and fabrics of second-hand clothes and then thread, adds further layers of collage to the initial hand-cut paper artworks. It has been lots of fun! Each piece is a one-off, made with love.

You can also commission us to make your own one-off piece by selecting your chosen collage and a colour and size for your piece of clothing and we will create something special just for you!

Contact a.tsilemanis@gmail.com

PhDs and Podcasts

By Arts, Audio, Curation

It’s February, my birthday month, and I have just released episode 2 of my bookish podcast Gather- check it all out here! And I have also had final approval of my PhD titled ‘Creative Activation of the Past: Mechanics’ Institutes, GLAM, heritage and creativity in the twenty-first century.’ You can have a look at the photo book I produced to accompany the thesis below (might take a little bit to load). It captures my three years as curator at the Ballaarat Mechanics’ Institute. I hope it provides some joy and inspiration, along with the podcast too! Love to hear your thoughts as always- drop me an email at a.tsilemanis@gmail.com or @amytinderbox on Instagram etc. A friend recently commented “I am constantly amazed at how rich your creative and intellectual life is” and I do feel pretty grateful for that and love sharing it with you all. x

Collage and Podcast Fun

By Arts, Audio

I am happy to present my collage exhibition ’49 Collages for Friends’ now on in Unicorn Lane Gallery, Ballarat. Thanks to all my muses and to Ballarat Arts and Culture for the opportunity to exhibit these pieces. Wander by for a look! (133 Sturt St next to the Unicorn Hotel)

All the prints are for sale, and you can grab a colourful postcard pack of images in my shop too

“This exhibition showcases prints of the 49 weird and wonderful collages I have created for friends and family over the last year in my especially created Collagarium! 

Creating these pieces has provided a quiet yet colourful sanctuary for me, as well as a way to send a hug and a smile to loved ones near and far. Many were made with a colour and word prompt from the friend, and they were created while I thought of them, often with my cat Minerva by my side.  The collages have travelled to friend’s homes around Ballarat, Australia and over the seas to Sweden and Mexico. They have been an absolute joy to create and I hope you enjoy them too!”

I am also thrilled to have got the first episode of my podcast out this month too. Check out all the GATHER with Minerva’s Books & Ideas news over here

Good wishes to all for the festive season

xx