Indefinite Remnants / These Are The Days You Will Remember / Bus@Docklands
Published: October 30, 2009 by Timmwardion
Filed under Exhibitions
Opening: Tuesday, November 3, 2009 6.00pm – 8.00pm (map)
These are the days you will remember (Main Gallery) – Christina Hayes
A few years ago, starting a small business ‘A Portrait to Remember’, I had the idea to take peoples old family photos and enliven their memory of loved ones by painting them a ‘beautiful heirloom quality oil painting’. Fantastic business cards. But it didn’t work out.
The business, in fact was a sort of front. Compelled by my own photos of family past I travelled to the Philippines with my mother, to diligently scrawl down the stories of the lives of men and women mythologised by family lore.
The photos were gradually put aside to make way for imagery that appeared like visions; or a collation of visual imaginings, that I felt needed to be embodied. Friends and family were enlisted to pose, and my sister Esther Marie Hayes, a costume designer helped me dress them. The visual telling of these stories was enriched by the involvement of many people. They are deeply thanked.
Pandanggo Sa Ilaw (the Candle Dance) and Tinikling (the Bamboo Dance) will be performed live at the exhibition opening at Bus Projects. The dances, performed by The Filipino Silayan Dance Academy, require grace, balance and great poise to avoid injury (think rhythmically pounding Bamboo stalks and hot wax), and should not to be missed. And, like all good Barrio Fiestas, there will be plenty of beer and Lumpia (Filipino spring rolls).
Indefinite Remnants (Skinny Gallery) – Polly Stanton & Evan Demas
Bus @ Docklands Build it and they will come (Sound Space & Foyer) – RMIT 2nd & 3rd year Interior Design Students
It’s been coming for a while, and the actual date is uncertain, but sometime next year Bus Projects will have to find a new home to make way for a new building proposed for it’s current site.
As part of the search for a new home, and the re-imagining of what Bus Projects can be, one class from the RMIT 2nd & 3rd year Interior Design course have chosen Bus Projects’ plight as their muse.
The show consists of student work, imagining how Bus Projects could be re-cast as a prominent feature within the Docklands precinct and the Melbourne cultural scene.
Chronox (Bus Window Seat) – Michael Prior & Lachlan Conn







