curated by EFFA

It would be a nice place

10

March 2022

10

Mar

2022

1

Apr 2022

Gallery 3

It would be a nice place

curated by EFFA

10

March 2022

10

March

2022

1

April 2022

Gallery 3

Featuring artists Dean Cross and Tributary Project (Geoff Robinson, Ying-Lan Dann, Saskia Schut, Benjamin Woods).‘It would be a nice place’ explores what it means to clean up Australia from within the colonial project. Working through water, these works explore the entanglements of violence and temporalities that saturate the landscape—both real and reimagined. Unmooring ideas around aquatic flows as naturally cleansing, they ask us instead: when the water rises, who feels the flood?The exhibition features media works by Dean Cross and Tributary Project (Geoff Robinson, Ying-Lan Dann, Saskia Schut, Benjamin Woods). Worimi artist Dean Cross’s Pauline (A Portrait) revisits the Toowoomba floods as a metaphor for the colonial project. Silurian Geology speaks to a specific moment within and in connection to the lower Moonee Ponds Creek tributary system, where the concreted channel meets a siltstone rock face from the Silurian geologic period.Tributary Project is supported by the City of Melbourne Arts Grants program, Bus Projects, and Composite.

Exhibition documented by Lucy Foster.

Featuring artists Dean Cross and Tributary Project (Geoff Robinson, Ying-Lan Dann, Saskia Schut, Benjamin Woods).‘It would be a nice place’ explores what it means to clean up Australia from within the colonial project. Working through water, these works explore the entanglements of violence and temporalities that saturate the landscape—both real and reimagined. Unmooring ideas around aquatic flows as naturally cleansing, they ask us instead: when the water rises, who feels the flood?The exhibition features media works by Dean Cross and Tributary Project (Geoff Robinson, Ying-Lan Dann, Saskia Schut, Benjamin Woods). Worimi artist Dean Cross’s Pauline (A Portrait) revisits the Toowoomba floods as a metaphor for the colonial project. Silurian Geology speaks to a specific moment within and in connection to the lower Moonee Ponds Creek tributary system, where the concreted channel meets a siltstone rock face from the Silurian geologic period.Tributary Project is supported by the City of Melbourne Arts Grants program, Bus Projects, and Composite.

EFFA

EFFA hosts an annual film festival, along with events throughout the year, online screenings, and a developing environmental arts stream. We feature features, documentaries, short films, and experimental cinema, along with impactful talks and alternate avenues for experiencing environmental cinema.