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Victor Harbor SA 5211
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Change Media

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Power and Privilege - Arts Front 2030

November 25, 2016 Carl Kuddell
2016 November Arts Front 2030 conference, Footscray Community Arts Centre, VICHundreds of artists and arts workers gathered at Arts Front to discuss and plan how to influence art and culture in Australia.It was a power and privilege cauldron, as peo…

2016 November Arts Front 2030 conference, Footscray Community Arts Centre, VIC

Hundreds of artists and arts workers gathered at Arts Front to discuss and plan how to influence art and culture in Australia.

It was a power and privilege cauldron, as people attempted to share their values and collaboratively create future visions.

We created a Power and Privilege working group and sent out the following creative responses.

If you are interested in joining us to explore, disrupt and reframe privileged assumptions arising in the Arts Fronts campaigns, contact us.

creating-together-artsfront2016-creative-response1
After 2 days with 200+ people creating together we suggested a power and privilege working group - funny the only space left was the cafe...It's going to be an interesting journey...We presented a 2-hour playful examination of privilege, fear and po…

After 2 days with 200+ people creating together we suggested a power and privilege working group - funny the only space left was the cafe...It's going to be an interesting journey...

We presented a 2-hour playful examination of privilege, fear and power to reclaim and reframe the cultural value debate.

Over the last two years, as part of Jen’s Australia Council for the Arts CACD Fellowship, we have been thinking about the new - and old - crisis in our sector and what tools we might need for effective change. We have focused on what it means to co-create and how colonizing mindsets can impact our best intentions.

And here are the questions we brought to the event:
• How do we create together equitably in times of crisis, when access and capacity are stratified?
• How can we open up a discussion about reclaiming and reframing values and solidarity, beyond the neo-liberal frames we are all currently trapped in? In the Arts we see it permeate through all levels of involvement, [arts admin, practitioners, participants, stakeholders, audience] with shifts towards risk avoidance and fear-driven self-censorship that inhibit our ability to imagine.
• What would be required to avoid bringing old assumptions and crusty power structures into a new network?
• How can we increase our awareness of the values and beliefs we bring (caring and harmful) and explore how they impact on all stages of the co-creative process?
• How can we co-create a shared vision that clearly separates the values from the hidden and overt violence that manifests in colonial collaborations?
• How do we create a space to consider absent voices and chaos, (the new, the unknown) which arise when creating a collective vision?

We are developing a prototype game to explore how we create better together, to uncover ways to identify old patterns of power and privilege and explore how we can disrupt and reframe those values to collaboratively develop new narratives to work more equitably together. Our aims to develop a wicked world engine for personal and collaborative systemic change, called 'Creating Together - what can possibly go wrong?', to be launched as a standalone initiative with a range of partners in 2017.

This session introduced these concepts:

1. Explore Arts Front current visions and the values that drive socially engaged art projects
2. Explore how we can disrupt internalized and systemic violence, fear and privilege
3. Reframe our power relationships and begin to separate the violence from the values to speak back to bullying on a personal and systematic level

In art, 2014-2018 Tags 2016

Ngarrindjeri Yarluwar-Ruwe

September 27, 2016 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Yarluwar-Ruwe Partnership CLLMM evaluation - SA 2016

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

Change Media in collaboration with the Ngarrindjeri media team produced  a short evaluation video about the Ngarrindjeri partnerships in the delivery of the Coorong, Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth (CLLMM) Recovery Project.The video will be utilised as an evaluation and promotion product by NRA, Ngarrindjeri community and the Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources (DEWNR).

The video features highlights of five years of work conducted by Ngarrindjeri under the CLLMM Recovery Project, and the significant positive impact this had on Ngarrindjeri community and lands and water, the program's successes, challenges and future vision.

Credits

Producer: Carl Kuddell

Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Writers: Ngarrindjeri managers Luke Trevorrow, in consultation with the NRA Board, DENWR and in collaboration with Change Media

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr, Owen Love Jnr, Carl Kuddell

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Camera: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Owen Love

Editors: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell

Participants and contributors include:

Uncle Derek Walker

Prof. Daryle Rigney

Prof. Steve Hemming

Lachlan Sutherland

Uncle Major Sumner

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Ngarrindjeri community members

Ngarrindjeri heritage rangers

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Ngarrindjeri Media Team

Acknowledgements:

The Coorong Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth Recovery Project is funded by the South Australian Government’s Murray Futures program and the Australian Government.

This Ngarrindjeri Partnership Porject evaluation video is a part of the Coorong Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth Recovery Project, funded by the South Australian Government’s Murray Futures program and the Australian Government.

©2016 Ngarrindjeri and Change Media

Partners - Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority, Ngopamuldi Aboriginal Corporation, South Australian Government Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources, Urimbirra Wildlife Park Victor Harbor

In 2014-2018 Tags Indigenous, 2016

We Are Water People

June 1, 2016 Carl Kuddell

2016 June - Coorong, Lakes and Murray River, SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

Change Media and Ngarrindjeri collaborated on a short web-documentary, as an engaging promotional tool for Ngarrindjeri and DEWNR, to showcase the significance of Ngarrindjeri science and cultural understanding of the Murray Mouth, the Murray River, the Lower Lakes and the Coorong.

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The documentary features significant Ngarrindjeri cultural and caring for country practices and locations along the Murray River, the Lower Lakes, Coorong and the Murray Mouth, to highlight the spiritual connection between Ngarrindjeri and their lands and waters.
The documentary follows the narration script and storyboard developed by NRA, Change Media and DEWNR in late 2015, with a voice-over performed by Ngarrindjeri elder Ellen Trevorrow.

changemedia-2016-ngarrindjeri-We-Are-WaterPeople-Raukkan.jpg

Credits

Producer: Carl Kuddell

Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Writers: Ngarrindjeri managers Luke Trevorrow, Clyde Rigney Jnr and Laurie Rankine Jnr, in consultation with the NRA Board, DENWR and in collaboration with Change Media

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr, Owen Love Jnr, Carl Kuddell

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Camera: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Owen Love

Editors: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Narrator: Ngarrindjeri Elder Ellen Trevorrow

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell

Participants and contributors include:

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Uncle Bud

Uncle Major Sumner

Prof. Daryle Rigney

Prof. Steve Hemming

Margaret Sexton

Ngarrindjeri community members

Ngarrindjeri heritage rangers

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Ngarrindjeri Media Team

Laurie, Owen, Johnny and Daryl. Arnold, Lalo

changemedia-2016-ngarrindjeri-We-Are-WaterPeople-murraymouth.png

Funded through the South Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water and Natural Resources and the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

©2016 Ngarrindjeri and Change Media

Partners

Department of the Environment, Water and Natural Resources

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

Urimbirra Wildlife Park Victor Harbor

In 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Indigenous, Aboriginal, environment, 2016

Ngarrindjeri Shorts 1 - ABC

January 27, 2016 Carl Kuddell

Everything is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Shorts 1 - ABC iView - 2016 January - SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

For Ngarrindjeri, everything is connected. Join their elders Ellen Trevorrow and Major Sumner on country as they share stories of art, culture and survival. We collaborated with Ngarrindjeri to create a beautiful web series for the inaugural Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub, linking Ngarrindjeri art, culture and country.

The Ngarrindjeri weaving, dancing and wood-carving videos showcase Ngarrindjeri culture and invite people to visit and participate in cultural activities at Camp Coorong. They were created during a series of multi-arts and capacity-building workshops with Ngarrindjeri communities in 2016.

The 4x 7min series is available on ABC’s iView arts channel under the title ‘Ngarrindjeri Shorts’. Click on the images below to watch all four episodes.

We Are Ngarrindjeri - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Weaving - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Carving - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Dance - Everything Is Connected


FInd 30sec trailers for Everything is Connected here:

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Dance - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Weaving - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Carving - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Click here for Ngarrindjeri Shorts season 2 - Ngarrindjeri Speaking for SeaCountry.

 

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News flash - Thursday May 19th, 2016:

Everything Is Connected has been nominated for the Official Selection of the International Melbourne WebFest 2016! We are also nominated for Best Non-Fiction [Australia] and Best Cinematography [International]!!!

The series also was nominated for the 2016 SA Screen Awards and will screen on ABC iView in July 2016. And we can now announce that we have received funding from the Australia Council for the Arts for a Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub, which will include another web series featuring Ngarrindjeri artists and cultural stories.

Big congrats to our team both at Ngarrindjeri and Change Media - and a huge thanks to everyone involved and our partners and friends for all your support!

changemedia-2016-Everything-is-connected-carving-Moogy.jpg

Together with our community partners, the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and the Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association, we delivered a series of multi-arts community engagement and capacity-building workshops in 2015-2016, to transmit Ngarrindjeri culture to young leaders and simultaneously created three new digital media works: Ngarrindjeri Carving with Elder Major Sumner and community members, Ngarrindjeri Dancing with Tal Kin Jeri dance group, and Ngarrindjeri Weaving with Elder Auntie Ellen Trevorrow and community members.

The inter-generational cultural exchange during the workshops, masterclasses and co-creative productions supported core elements of Ngarrindjeri cultural and arts activities.

changemedia-2016-Everything-is-connected-dance-TalKinJeri.jpg

The artworks, artifacts and a series of engaging cinema quality multimedia artworks are now being used by Ngarrindjeri to communicate culture and connection to country to the wider community.

Production credits

Producers: Carl Kuddell

Series Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid  

Director: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Developed by: Clyde Rigney Jnr, Luke Trevorrow and Laurie Rankine Jnr, Jennifer Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell and Johanis Lyons-Reid, in consultation with the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Assistant Camera: Laurie Rankine Jnr, Owen Love

Editor & Post-Production: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell, Laurie Rankine Jnr 

Participants and contributors include

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Uncle Major Moogy Sumner

Ngarrindjeri community members

Alice Abdulla

Edith Carter

Latoya Love

Harmony Love

Bessie Rigney

Cheyenne Carter

Thomas Trevorrow

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Loretta Sumner

Krissa Sumner

Major Sumner

Stacia Sumner

Lianna Sumner

Tyrone Lindsay

Jordon Karpany

Damien Wanganeen

Ryan Knowles

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority team

Clyde Rigney Jnr

Luke Trevorrow

Laurie Rankine Jnr

Owen Love

Supported by:

Australia Council for the Arts

Arts SA

Change Media

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

Natural Resources Management Board SA Murray Darling Basin

The Rural City of Murray Bridge

Alexandrina Council




This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

In broadcast, 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Aboriginal, Indigenous, iView, Major Moogy Sumner, Tal Kin Jeri, Melbourne International Web Film Festival, 2016

Escape from Cloud 9 - Sydney exhibition

October 8, 2015 Carl Kuddell
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Jen Lyons-Reid Australia Council CACD Fellowship - exploring narratives and digital workflows

Jen collaborated with Francesca Da Rimini and Carl Kuddell on this cartoon work, as a contribution to the Affliated Text's exhibition 'Selfie: Image Narrative Opiate', curated by Bronia Iwanczak and Lynne Barwick.

Together we developed the concept and text work, and Jennifer produced the graphic art and lettering.


changemedia-2015-selfie-exhibition.jpg

The Selfie exhibition took place between Sep 9th 2015 and Oct 16th 2015, at Cross Art Books, at 33 Rosluyn Street, Kings Cross, Sydney.

Source: http://www.changemedia.net.au/projects/esc...
In art, 2014-2018 Tags Selfie, Jen Lyons-Reid, Francesca Da Rimini, Carl Kuddell, Cross Art Books, 2016
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Change Media is a Tallstoreez Productionz initiative assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

We acknowledge Ngarrindjeri as the traditional custodians of the land we live and work on, and pay respect to elders past and present. Sovereignty has never been ceded.

©2023 Tallstoreez Productionz Pty Ltd

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