Dark MOFO Time Lapse

Toward the last days of Mike Parr’s exhibition and standing in the cold, I started to witness for the first time the sun setting behind the hills of the 1827 Barracks Building and the array of dim incandescent light bulbs that lite the building in a soft yellow glow, highlighting the sandstone colour. I placed the camera on the ground and set it to time lapse and watched as people mill about from door to door, building to building.

httpv://youtu.be/c4Qi_rjLPEY

 

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Thoughts on Mike Parr’s Dark MOFO contribution.

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Many people have been and seen the Dark MOFO exhibition at Willow Court. What’s it all about, that’s a fair question to ask. People wonder if this is art or is it ART, is it a strange new breed of thought that little of us understand? Here are some thoughts;

 

People leave desperate for a drink. Needing to discuss the experience. Which was what it is. A guy in an derelict asylum. Living and drawing.

Was it exploitative? Tasteless? Should the history of pain, of madness be left alone? Or washed away and replaced with 1000 count sheets and a minibar? What IS this artwork exactly?

Mike Parr’s simple presence, his request for silence and his ‘price’ that each person leaves a mirror created for me a quiet ritual acknowledgement of this place and its people. A bridge from a difficult past of people doing the wrong thing believing it was the best thing into whatever future the people of New Norfolk can manifest for what is an amazing built environment in a very very pretty town.

Overtime the rooms will change. As more and more footprints tramp through the possum poo and the mirrors accrue, each mirror an avatar for that person or for another person who might have lived and worked there, the asylum will be re-populated.

It’s an example of how art, performance and participation can create change. In time Willow Court will bustle with commerce. But it couldn’t until the nature of the space has been altered. ASYLUM is an effective start to that process.

Which reminds us that other sites in Tasmania that have been held in silence, that are loci of pain can be gently not healed, not cleansed… but acknowledged. Simply and with respect. But as Leigh said at the launch. It isn’t cheap. And it isn’t entertainment. 

Ryk Goddard.

 

I struggle with this on many levels, too many to express here. Much of it gets down to “respect and intent” of the artist. Mike Parr is interesting and always provocative. I always feel the need to understand intent with these types of performances. The site deserves ‘respect’ & I detest performances that demonize, I don’t think that was his intent.. This article clarified for me, where Mike Parr was working from. Click Here to Read

Janet Presser 

As I laid in bed and listened to the rain, cuddled my life partner and thought how lucky I was that I didn’t have to mow the lawn I thought of Mike Parr. As a colleague did the 6 o’clock tour this morning at Willow Court she said that Mike is sleeping on the floor on a mattress and how unexciting that was to watch, maybe Mike’s art form was to really understand his brother’s state of mental health and is captured in a cell that he could walk free from at any time, but instead is living the mind of his brother Tim, the man who was know as, “the man who spoke to himself”. Mike didn’t have what I had this morning or the choice to mow the lawn or not to, instead he is locked away in his mind doing his art? If we sprinkle some therapeutic dust over that we the community and good intentioned health professional could consider that to be the best we can do. You all have a nice day, I know I will.

Mark Krause

When teaching at TAFE we took our students through these buildings as part of their understanding the history (recent) of disability services in this state. Voices stain the walls and corridors. A space and place of great survival and violence. I hope to go but my fear is whether the performance will capture the abuse and violence of that place. I worked with many people that survived it. I don’t know if their stories and memories will be captured and evoked. Will they again be silenced? And this time by “art” i acknowledge this may be an unfair post as i am yet to experience. I just remember supporting a woman who used to live there. We were driving to the shops and out of the blue she said “they used to make us take out our teeth they did” pardon, what I replied? “Before we had to suck their you know, suck their….down there” gap, space as i did not know what to say, …. ” can we get some ice cream for after dinner” Maybe I will leave my mirror for her? I don’t know what the mirror will catch that is all???

Dr Paul Levett

I also reported on a conversation I had with MONA Owner David Walsh this week. 

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Yesterday I heard a story about a 9 year old boy who’s family were visiting his uncle at the Royal Derwent Hospital 37 years ago and while standing near the road he explained that he could see a lady on the bridge over the Lachlan River. This is the river that runs through the hospital and divides it into the east and west sides of the hospital. He explained that he was on the east side and he wondered what this lady was doing on the bridge. He said that she was dressed in a nightie while standing on the bridge. He then told me how he then watched her climb up on the side and then jump from the bridge. He then went on to express to me how cathartic it was to be standing and looking at the same bridge 37 years later. I could see the impression that this deep memory had left this man during his childhood. Who was this man, it was David Walsh. After a discussion I believe he does understand the site’s history and some of the painful past that makes up that history. I was able to answer some of his questions about the different buildings and their previous uses. For those that don’t know David, he is the owner of MONA http://www.mona.net.au/ and the generous philanthropic person behind the current art installation (Mike Parr) at Willow Court.

 

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Mike Parr event nearly here. Dark Mofo.

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Full article from this weekend’s Mercury, click here.

Dark Mofo’s presence at Willow Court will include a “site activation”, with food vans and the like setting up around New Norfolk to help create a festival atmosphere in the Derwent Valley town.

Local shops will also decorate their frontages with mirrors in reference to Mike Parr’s work.

Willow Court was only closed in 2001, a surprisingly recent end for the institution-style mental-health facility, which housed its first patients way back in 1827.

It is still an intimidating and, in parts, unnerving building, its complicated history occupying a similarly complicated place in the minds of people who have some connection with it, or who lived in the community when it was operating.

Curator Jarrod Rawlins says the local community is supportive of the project and great care has been taken to be respectful of the site’s history.

“And it is also a great thing for a small community like New Norfolk to have such a big, important, international artist doing a project there,” he says.

“These things normally find themselves at places like the Sydney Biennale or other big cities and central places.

“But this is being done in this spot because of the site, and people will come because of that.

“And up there in winter it’s beautiful – the cold air, a bit of fog. If the interstate visitor wanted the drama of Tasmania in the winter, that has to be New Norfolk. And being free, people don’t have to think too hard, they can just go.”

Entry to Asylum is free. Open 24 hours a day, from Thursday, June 9, to Sunday, June 12 (by appointment after dark; register online). Open noon-4pm on Monday, June 13, and from noon-4pm on Saturday, June 18, and Sunday, June 19.

Entry by Mirror Only, performed in Asylum, will start at noon on Thursday, June 9, and go for 72 hours. To enter, bring a mirror – which you will leave behind. darkmofo.net.au/asylum

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Council back MOFO event with $37.900 event co-ordination

On the 5th May the Derwent Valley Council considered the Event Co-ordination Quote for support around the Dark MOFO event. A range of events and services were considered as part of the planning including:

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It is unclear at the moment if the “Proposed street events to compliment the Dark MOFO event to be held at Willow Court in June 2016″ was passed by the Council. It is expected that 8000 people will visit the free exhibition during the 72 hours that Mike Parr will be working.

The proposal is suggesting entertainment, marketing, stageing,  security and transportation, bonfires, lighting, food and drinks. This is the first big event that the site has had since the stage one restoration was completed and is inline with the DVC plans for the site to be an events centre of quality which would attract people and support the business opportunities of the town and area.

The full plan is 2 May 2016 – Special Council Meeting Agenda or click the picture above.

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Heritage Month / Dark Mofo events

Some great opportunities to get out and about at Willow Court and Frascati House in May and June 2016. The maximum cost is $5 for persons over 12 years old.

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The Friends of Willow Court will be running events at the site for Heritage Festival 2016 which you can access. On May 14th and 15th  Heather Burke, Assoc Professor of Archaeology, Flinders University, will talk about the results from the recent geophysical investigations around Willow Court and Frascati House, and her long term plans to conduct archaeological excavations at the site over the next 10 years. Cost $5, under 12 years, free.

Frascati house ex M Richards

The Friends of Frascati are also running an event the weekend before at Friscati House. Frascati dates back to 1834 when John Burnett, the first Colonial Secretary, built his country villa on the site. Recent works have questioned whether Burnett added onto an existing building and whether there was a pre-existing building on site at the time. Come and rediscover some of Frascati’s history. Tours of Frascati House and historic gardens available. Two great weekends of Willow Court activities to enjoy, entry by gold coin donation.

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Another opportunity to visit the site will be during a Dark Mofo event. Seminal Australian performance artist Mike Parr pushed to his limits in and around the grounds of the former Royal Derwent Hospital (circa 1827). Please register your interest in the event; full details will be announced soon: http://darkmofo.net.au/mike-parr-registration

Asylum, the exhibition, is open:
Thursday 9 – Monday 13 June, 12 – 4pm
Saturday 18 + Sunday 19 June, 12 – 4pm
Free

Entry by Mirror Only, the 72-hour performance, is open continuously for three days:
Begins 12pm, Thursday 9 June
Ends 12pm, Sunday 12 June
Entry by mirror only: bring a shard, or full mirror, to leave behind.

Please note that both the exhibition and installation contain disturbing content and themes, and may not be suitable for children.

Presented by Detached Cultural Organisation in association with Dark Mofo

 

 

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