Arts North West Rivers to Ridges team following songlines to Tenterfield.

Arts North West, through their Aboriginal Culture Support Program, heads to Tenterfield next week to record stories of Elders as they prepare a series of documentaries for their “Rivers to Ridges, and the stories in between project” which has been funded by the Federal Government’s Indigenous Languages and Arts Program.

“Rivers to Ridges” and the stories in between, gathers and documents the stories of Elders, Artists and the Aboriginal history of the New England North West in multimedia format. It provides Aboriginal Artists the opportunity to translate and share the stories with the broader community through workshops across our region over two years.

Lead artist for the Tenterfield component of the project is well known Elder, Aunty Ronella Jerome, better known as Dolly. Dolly has been working with Creative Consultant/Project Manager, Lorrayne Riggs, Arts North West Aboriginal Arts Officer and Film Maker, Brendan Blacklock from Blacklock media in preparation for recording the stories of other local Elders including Helen Duroux, Rod McIntosh, Grace Binge and Glen Innes’ Adele Chapman-Burgess.

“I’m really looking forward to this deadly project”, said Aunty Dolly Jerome. “Recording our stories is something I am very passionate about, it is paramount for the preservation of our cultural knowledge”

Lorrayne Riggs, Project Manager said “this is the first time that we know of where the stories recorded will be focused on the unique cultural value of our region. Too often Aboriginal culture from NSW is not valued as highly as in our neighbouring states.By translating and sharing the stories from our region we are able to show the world that Aboriginal culture is alive, important and highly valued in the New England of NSW”.

The project team will spend a week in Tenterfield filming before they head to Tamworth, Narrabri and Moree later in the year.

 

 

Pocket Productions Presents Fall of the Roman Umpire

Arts North West ON TOUR  Pocket Productions and Creating Drama Theatre Company are excited to announce the Fall of the Roman Umpire 2017 New England North West tour.   

A one man show written, directed & performed by Dennis Coard, star of ‘Home and Away’, ‘Blue Heelers’, ‘Stingers’ and ‘MDA’ , Fall of the Roman Umpire is a charming and cheeky self-narrated journey through life. Starting with Coard’s childhood emigration from Ireland with his family, the show is an intimate portrait of a journey through life, with the audience there beside him, sharing his joys, hopes and pain.

This is the first tour of the new Arts North West initiative Pocket Productions, offering the smaller communities in our region affordable and professional theatre and musical productions in venues such as community or school hall, school of art building or an undercover showground area.  Pocket Productions is a networked approach and based on the successful Arts North West ON TOUR model.

Fall of the Roman Umpire will be performed in following venues in 2017. Contact the venue for booking information.

Emerald Hill Community Hall Fri 10 March

Walcha Central School Hall Sat 11 March

Maules Creek Community HallThur 16 March

Breeza Community Hall Fri 17 March

Warialda Town Hall matinee Sat 18 March

The Playhouse Hotel Barraba Sat 18 March

Bundarra Community Hall Sun 19 March

Deepwater School of Arts Fri 24 March

Ben Lomond Memorial Hall Sat 25 March

Youth Scholarship to ARTLANDS Dubbo Awarded to Wee Waa Local

Arts North West is very pleased to announce 19 year old, Georgia Gordon from Wee Waa, a young visual art student now studying at Southern Cross University received the Arts North West ARTLANDS Dubbo scholarship.

Arts North West is excited to offer this youth scholarship valued at $1,500 to attend the ARTLANDS Dubbo Regional Arts Australia National Conference and Festival in Dubbo from 27-30 October 2016.

“This is a huge opportunity to enrich my arts practice and as a university Visual Arts student” said Ms Gordon.  Arts North West Executive Director is delighted to be able to support youth in our region. “This is a fantastic opportunity for a young person from our region to learn more about regional arts, to be inspired by creative ideas, and to network with key artists and artworkers from around Australia”, said Ms Downer. 

ARTLANDS is Part Conference, Part Festival, All Arts with four jam-packed days of activity, conversation, discussion, debate and inspiration from across Australia and overseas.  For more information about ARTLANDS visit www.artlands.com.au

SUCCESS! NORTHERN Tablelands MP Adam Marshall has today announced three arts cultural grants of over $133,000

NORTHERN Tablelands MP Adam Marshall has today announced three arts cultural grants of over $133,000 today including one which will see six high profile museums in Armidale, Glen Innes, Bingara, Uralla, Tamworth and Werris Creek become the stuff of colourful and quirky stories for publication.

Mr Marshall said the Stuff of Tales arts cultural project will take some of the ‘stuffy’ out of old some of our oldest museums across the region west, dust them off and make them the stuff of characters and cultural tourism stories.

The Stuff of Tales project has been awarded $51,147 through a state government program which will see a partnership between Arts North West and the New England Writers’ Centre to focus a literary light on the celebrated museum collection pieces and their human history stories.

Mr Marshall announced the grant funding with Arts North West executive director Caroline Downer and New England Writers’ Centre chair and author Sophie Masson at the historic Saumarez Homestead, near Armidale.

The iconic homestead museum is one of the six to be featured in the online and e-book publishing series.

The Roxy Theatre at Bingara, History House at Glen Innes, Railway Museum in Werris Creek, Powerstation Museum in Tamworth and McCrossin’s Mill in Uralla are the others to be featured.

“This is a really exciting project because it will bring to life some of our major historical buildings and museums but importantly bring those tales of history back into the spotlight,” Mr Marshall said.

“These are places of rich cultural heritage and there’s also some wonderful little gems of stories behind those times and who better to tell some of those stories and highlight some of the quirky and little known stories behind the doors.

“There’s an absolute goldmine of history here in the north and who better to open the pages of some of those tales than some of our most celebrated local authors.”

Ms Downer said the authors would be paired with museum volunteers and would produce e-book editions on each, including illustrations.

“We’re looking to get really engaging words to build the creative content and build the idea and promote how our museums are unique because too often people don’t know about them,” Ms Downer said.

She said the project timeline was two years and they were looking to hold workshops as part of the getting-to-know-you relationships between the literary partners and museum presenters.

Writers’ Centre chair Sophie Masson said the centre had been involved in selecting the celebrated regional authors for the series. These include John Heffernan, Ian Irvine, Fiona McDonald, Bronwyn Parry, Beattie Alvarez and Ms Masson, along with illustrator David Allan.

Mr Marshall said the collaborative project would not only raise awareness locally of the history of the museums and their localities and early communities but also serve to promote and publicise the diversity of heritage outside the region – and attract more tourists.

“Often we become blasé about what’s around us or we underestimate the value of what we have in our own backyards when it comes to our early stories and this is a project that will shine a light on that history and our stories,” he said.

The funding is under the Arts and Cultural Development Program and the Minister for the Arts Troy Grant said it supported artists and cultural workers which enriching the lives of people across NSW.

The Stuff of Tales is one of three grants Mr Marshall announced for the north today.

A $60,000 grant to the Armidale Cultural Centre and Keeping Place will see an extension to their programs while a separate $22,000 grant to the New England Writers’ Centre will underwrite a program for young writers to promote young adult fiction and provide outreach programs to schools and a dedicated children’s literature festival.

Mr Marshall said that grant would also offer workshops in professional development and genre writing, including young adult fiction and crime.

It will also continue its Youth Online outreach program to schools, and present two specialised festivals: ‘Sorcery and Spaceships’ focusing on speculative fiction and ‘Booked In’, the only children’s literature festival in regional NSW.