woody allen once said, ‘we should all be careful · 2017-09-18 · woody allen once said, ‘we...
TRANSCRIPT
Woody Allen once said, ‘We should all be careful to confine our opinions to matters of which we are completely ignorant.’ Well he didn’t actually. I made that up. I’m thinking to myself, who am I to not follow Woody’s advice, even if he didn’t give it?
Had Woody said what I said he said, he would have been following his own advice. He is, after all, ignorant of ignorance. I am, however, a Zen master of not knowing. That’s why I built a museum. I didn’t know it was hard. Actually it wasn’t. I didn’t know anything about art either. But I learned a bit. Now I know what I don’t know. Ignorance comes in many guises. Of these, the unknown unknowns remain mostly unknown to me.
I don’t know much about music either. I don’t know what I don’t know. But Brian and his musical mates know what they don’t know and they want to know it. Hopefully, while they learn it, they’ll teach it to me. And you.
— David Walsh
Welcome to MONA FOMA (MOFO) 2012 – the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) Festival of Music and Art, proudly supported by MONA ROMA, MoMa, Faux MO (FOMO), and the Tasmanian Government.
BUY TICKETS
To buy tickets for MONA FOMA go toWWW.MOFO.NET.AU
You can also buy paper tickets atMONA FERRY TERMINALBROOKE ST PIERHOBART8.30AM-6.30PM, 7 DAYS
And at PW1 BOX OFFICEPRINCES WHARF 1 SHEDCASTRAY ESPLANADE, HOBARTJAN 13-21, 9AM-5PMJAN 14-15 & 19-21, 9AM-LATE
To buy entry tickets to the museum, go to WWW.MONA.NET.AUOrMONA FERRY TERMINALBROOKE ST PIERHOBART8.30AM-6.30PM, 7 DAYS
Entry to the museum is $20 for adults, $10 concession, or free to Tasmanians and under 18s.
Download the MOFO2012 app from mid December 2011
The Tasmanian Government is delighted to partner with MONA again to deliver the fourth MONA FOMA.
MONA FOMA has become such a vital part of Tasmania’s cultural landscape that it’s hard to believe it started only four years ago. It offers locals and visitors alike a chance to experience internationally renowned performers – and upcoming local acts – in our own backyard.
MONA FOMA, together with David Walsh’s magnificent Museum of Old and New Art, are cultural icons for our island. They contribute to the diverse arts and cultural experiences that help make Tasmania such a great place to visit, and a great place to live.
MONA and MONA FOMA are also important because they challenge and extend our ideas about art and art practice. They have helped change the conversations of artistic leaders nationally and internationally.
The MONA FOMA event is not only a cultural driver, it also contributes significantly to Tasmania’s economy and tourism sector. It is an internationally recognised festival and a great drawcard for Tasmania. Events like this are especially important right now when Tasmania is facing tough economic times.
Apart from that very serious and important side, MONA FOMA is also about having fun, in the magnificent setting of Tasmania’s waterfront. It’s about great music, fine food, and having a good time.
Tasmania is well known as a destination offering superb natural scenery. MONA FOMA ensures that Tasmania is also well known for creativity, innovation and ingenuity.
When MONA FOMA started, curator Brian Ritchie said that the festival was about turning Hobart into ‘a musical and visual dreamland where anything can happen’. I am looking forward to experiencing that dreamland again in 2012 and I encourage locals and visitors alike to get involved.
— Lara Giddings MP Premier of Tasmania
Greetings MOFOs! We are overjoyed to embark upon MONA FOMA 2012. The world is catching on. Research indicates that so-called mainlanders and other foreigners flock to Tasmania in increasing numbers to experience this thing. Those who still call Tasmania home are starting to view MOFO as a summer tradition (even if the contents of the festival are far from traditional). Once again we have things that are, aren’t, shouldn’t be, resemble, dismantle, deconstruct and celebrate music. In abundance. MONA art curators Nicole Durling and Olivier Varenne toss some visuals and performances into the stew. This will make you question the nature of art. Let’s not forget our chefs, brew-meisters and winemakers.
MONA doesn’t care about awards, but after only three years MOFO was nominated for the Helpmann Award for Best Contemporary Music Festival. This reflects nicely upon you, the punters. We have our largest commission to date with The Barbarians from IHOS. Sure there’s PW1 again in new dress, but we’re also developing new MOFO venues ranging from oldie but goodie City Hall to brand new and radical St. Mary’s Cathedral Centre, a tiny gem of acoustic architecture... And there’s still heaps of free stuff! Plus bagpipes.
— Brian Ritchie MOFO Curator
LARA GIDDINGS MP PREMIER
BRIAN RITCHIECURATOR
TICKETS
This year, there’s the usual array of events to try for free.
We’re also putting on, at Princes Wharf 1, a variety of events that are covered by (astonishingly inexpensive!!) passes. Your best bet is to get a festival pass for $50, which gives you access to a smorgasbord of happenings at PW1. If they sell out (numbers are limited) or if you’d rather a smaller bite, get a day pass for $25.
MOFO FESTIVAL PASS JAN 14, 15, 19 & 20 PW1 $50
DAY PASS 1 SATURDAY JAN 14 PW1 $25
DAY PASS 2 SUNDAY JAN 15 PW1 $25
DAY PASS 3 THURSDAY JAN 19 PW1 $25
DAY PASS 4 FRIDAY JAN 20 PW1 $25
Or you could buy:
As well as your pass, you can buy tickets to our special events. Not that they’re not all special. You’re special. We’re all special.
Then there’s the festival art you can see at MONA. The museum’s usually closed on Tuesdays – but not during MOFO.
MOFO DAY PASSES & FESTIVAL PASSPersons under 12 years are admitted free to these events when accompanied by a paying adult. Proof of age may be requested at the door. Does not apply to special events.
PJ HARVEY PW1 $85
PHILLIP ADAMS BALLETLAB THEATRE ROYAL $25
IHOS CITY HALL $25
GIRL TALK PW1 $35
WEST HEAD PROJECT AND OUT HEAR MT. WELLINGTON $40
OVERBOARD II BOAT CRUISE $50
OPENING NIGHTSTREET PARTYFRI JAN 13
OPENING NIGHTSTREET PARTYFRI 13 JAN
OPENING NIGHTSTREET PARTYFRI JAN 13
HANGGAI CHINAThey rock hard in China. Hanggai throw in throat singing and traditional instruments, and dress like Genghis Khan.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 9PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBARTFREE
ROBIN FOX AUSLasers, smoke, electronic noise.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 10.30PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBART,WAREHOUSE FREE
eMDeeAUSMaster buskers turned high-tech musicians. Trance-like drum and didgeridoo. They sold a ridiculous number of CDs on the streets – see busking workshop Saturday January 14.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 7PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBARTFREE
LUCAS ABELA AUSLucas kisses and sings to sheets of amplified crystal. Come and see what happens.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 6.30PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBARTFREE
TUBA SKINNY USAOld-school New Orleans street musicians. They come bearing tubas, of course.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 8PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBARTFREE
Tuba Skinny is supported by the United States Consulate
THE DAD HORSE EXPERIENCE GERMANYEx-cabbie God-hollerer plucks banjo in demented fashion and wildly pumps the foot pedals. Anti-drug propaganda also likely.
FRIDAY JAN 13, 6PMCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST, HOBARTFREE
GABRIELLA SMART AUS Gabriella will be playing prepared piano works by John Cage. This means sticking erasers, screws and other paraphernalia into the strings of her beast. The show’s by candlelight, and late at night, ‘in the round’, as they say.
She will also show us, in an open demo, how the piano is prepared for the performance.
FRIDAY JAN 13, MIDNIGHT SATURDAY JAN 14, MIDNIGHT BAHA’I CENTRE FREE
OPEN DEMO THURSDAY JAN 12, 2-6.30PM BAHA’I CENTRE FREE
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Almost as good as the original.
Download the MOFO2012 app to find outabout location(s), dates, times and artists.
App available from mid December 2011.
Faux MoMofo Festival Club
11pm–
(FoMo)
OPENING NIGHTFRI JAN 13
Space-Shifter openingD
etached
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
Baha’i Centre
Gabriella Smart
Street Party
Lucas Abela
The Dad Horse Experience
eMDee
Tuba Skinny
Hanggai
Robin Fox
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
FAUX M
OU
ntil late >
JAN 13 - FEB 13, CLOSED TUESDAYS (EXCEPT JAN 17)10AM - 6PMMUSEUM OF OLD AND NEW ARTADULTS $20CONCESSION $10TASMANIANS & UNDER 18 FREE
MONA FOMAART
DANIEL MUDIE CUNNINGHAMAUSFUNERAL SONGSWhat song do you want played at your funeral? Daniel has been asking people for a number of years. He has compiled a musical anthology of anticipatory grieving for the loss of yourself from the world, or celebration for having been here in the first place.
SUSAN PHILIPSZ UKSusan Philipsz won the Turner Prize in 2010 for her work Lowlands, which involved recording herself singing a melancholic song, and impregnating a public space with the recording. The sound of her singing has a strange effect. It makes you somehow feel more keenly the weight of the place you are in. In the MONA galleries you will hear Susan’s new work The Two Sisters, which is comprised of her singing a seventeenth-century Scottish song, seemingly to herself, about sororicide – the murder of one’s sister.
NELLAUSLET THERE BE ROBE
‘Let there be sound,’ and there was sound ‘Let there be lights,’ and there was lights‘Let there be drums’, there was drums‘Let there be guitar’, there was guitar, ah‘Let there be rock’And it came to pass That rock ‘n’ roll was born.
AC/DC were clearly correlating the birth of rock with that of JC. Nell spins things a little bit Buddha. Come and see.
DAY 2SAT JAN 14
Ikeda experiments with sound in its raw state, at the edge of human hearing. This project makes visible the transmission of the multi-substance data that saturates our world. How… Don’t know yet. But we do know Ikeda is ace.
SATURDAY JAN 14, 10PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 1 $25
RYOJI IKEDA JAPAN
DATAMATICS
Image: datamatics [prototype-ver.2.0], 2006 © Ryoji Ikedaphoto by Ryuichi Maruo, courtesy of Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (YCAM)
Quaternaire represents Ryoji Ikeda for his performing arts throughout the world except Japan
This is BalletLab’s latest work, a spectacular interrogation of the nature of spectacle itself. It’s paradoxical, perhaps, to have performance written into you, by nature: it reaches into the realms of theatre, art and dance; as well as those of preening, nest-building, and the rituals of selecting a mate.
Aviary takes as its starting point the music of Olivier Messiaen: his Catalogue d’oiseaux (1958) is a musical catalogue of birdsong, and of the composer’s own wonderment.
JAN 14-17, 7.30PMTHEATRE ROYALTICKETS $25
PHILLIP ADAMS BALLETLAB AUS
AVIARYA SUITE FOR THE BIRD
Image: 3 Deep Design with Jeff Busby
Phillip Adams BalletLab would like to acknowledge the generous support of The Australia Council for the Arts, Arts Victoria, Helen Macpherson Smith Trust, Besen Family Foundation, The Oliver-Affleck Fund and the Norman H Johns Trust managed by Perpetual Trustees and our private donors. Aviary is presented in association with The Australian Ballet.
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DAY 2SAT JAN 14
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Elanee Ensemble
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
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Baha’i Centre
Gabriella Smart
Mount Wellington
West Head Project and Out Hear Kunanyi
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
Theatre Royal
Phillip Adams BalletLab Aviary
PW1
Ryoji Ikeda datamatics
David Chesworth Ensemble Vanishing Tekopia
eMDee Busking Workshop
Tuba Skinny Busking Performance
Tuba Skinny Busking Performance
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DAVID CHESWORTH ENSEMBLE AUSVANISHING TEKOPIAVanishing Tekopia indirectly refers to a tiny island being slowly subsumed by the South Pacific Ocean, and more rapidly by globalisation. Are we (we, the globe) losing our cultural diversity, and does it matter?
In this eleven-piece ensemble performance the two singers have mastered a phonetic language invented by Chesworth.
SATURDAY JAN 14, 8.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 1 $25
WEST HEAD PROJECT AND OUT HEAR AUSKUNANYIWe pick up you from PW1 and drive you up the mountain. Then your sound guides – Jim Denley, Monika Brooks and Dale Gorfinkel – lure you through the bush with their trumpets, tree roots and bamboo flutes. You come back to camp, eat yummy food, and get driven back to PW1.
SATURDAY JAN 14, 12PMSUNDAY JAN 15, 12PMDEPARTS PW1, FORECOURTTICKETS $40
ELANEE ENSEMBLE AUSThis Tasmanian double bass/viola duo will premier some new and unusual material.
SATURDAY JAN 14, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
eMDeeThey have sold 50,000 CDs while busking. How?
SATURDAY JAN 14, 6.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 1 $25
TUBA SKINNY Learn how to busk, New Orleans style.
SATURDAY JAN 14, 11AM PW1, FORECOURT FREE SATURDAY JAN 14, 7.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 1 $25
Tuba Skinny is supported by the United States Consulate
Image: © Melissa Webb
BUSKING WORKSHOP
BUSKING PERFORMANCE
PIERRE HENRY FRANCE
PAROXYSMS
Henry was born in 1927 in Paris. Seven years later he started studying music, and in 1944 – guided by Olivier Messiaen – he composed and conceived the music of the future.
Michel Chion, Pierre Henry, 2003
Pierre is the father of musique concrete, and pioneered most of the recording techniques musicians use today.
Now Papa Henry is cooking for us a special musical creation. He’s streaming it live from his home in Paris, which hosts the sounds and pictorial creations of his life and career. He’ll show us all the stages of creation – from insemination of idea and gestation of sound, to phonetic improvisation with his own voice. World premiere.
SUNDAY JAN 15, 10PMPW1LIVE VIRTUAL PERFORMANCEINCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 2 $25
DAY 3SUN JAN 15
Image: Anne Selders
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DAY 3SUN JAN 15
ROD THOMSON AUSTasmanian organist playing Olivier Messiaen compositions.
SUNDAY JAN 15, 4PMST MARY’S CATHEDRALFREE
NICK TSIAVOS AUSLIMINALNick plays stand-up jazz bass, improvised and combined with Byzantine chants. He’s accompanied by some of Melbourne’s top improvisers: Deborah Kayser, Adam Simmons, Peter Neville and Eugene Ughetti.
SUNDAY JAN 15, 2.30PMST MARY’S CATHEDRALFREE
ADAM SIMMONSAUSMelbourne multi-muso on the sax, clarinet and flute (and possibly the toy versions thereof). He’s usually in about a million different bands at once but for this performance, he’s all alone. SUNDAY JAN 15, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
Theatre Royal
Phillip Adams BalletLab Aviary
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Adam Simmons
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
St Mary’s Cathedral
Nick Tsiavos Liminal
Rod Thomson
Mount Wellington
West Head Project and Out Hear Kunanyi
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
PW1
Pierre Henry Paroxysms
David Chesworth Ensemble Badlands
SITE OPENS
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DAVID CHESWORTH ENSEMBLE AUSBADLANDS
Badlands re-imagines Carl Orff’s Schulwerk, a collection of deceptively simple melodies designed to teach music to children. Chesworth encountered Schulwerk as the score to Terrence Malick’s 1973 film, also called Badlands. It tells the story of two teenagers on a killing spree.
SUNDAY JAN 15, 8.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 2 $25 Image: © Adam Pretty
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DAY 4MON JAN 16Theatre Royal
Phillip Adams BalletLab Aviary
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
David Chesworth & Adrian Sherriff Nomonid
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
DAVID CHESWORTHAUSDavid Chesworth is our Artist in Residence. He co-founded post-punkers Essendon Airport, and is now one of Australia’s most distinctive composers and sound artists.
Chesworth draws on a wide range of musical genres and natural sound sources, layering them in unusual ways.
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
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etached
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useum of O
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SONIA LEBER & DAVID CHESWORTHAUSSPACE-SHIFTER Since 1996 Leber and Chesworth have worked with sound, video and installation, using the human voice as their principal medium.
At Detached, you will find a host of human voices – a ‘psychogeography’, they call it – that stalks you as you move about the space.
OPENING FRIDAY JAN 13, 5.30PMJAN 13- FEB 3, 12-5PMUNTIL MARCH 31 BY APPOINTMENT (03 6234 4111)DETACHEDFREE
The artists gratefully acknowledge the support of the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body.
DAVID CHESWORTH & ADRIAN SHERRIFFAUSNOMONIDChesworth, on the laptop, builds a complex structure of ‘found’ sounds and real-world recordings. He is joined by Adrian Sherriff on trombone, shakuhachi, percussion and electronics.
MONDAY JAN 16, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
MARIA LURIGHI AND FRIENDSAUSMaria is doing nine performances for us, drawing on an impressive range of sources and musical styles, including opera, jazz, classical and gospel. Her voice is earthy, raw and loud. You can also hear it as part of the Chesworth and Leber installation at Detached.
JAN 14-15 & 21-22, 4.30PMJAN 16-20, 1.15PM DETACHEDFREE
Audience limited to 50 people
Detached > piano resurrection > UTAS Conservatorium of Music
Image: Sonia Leber and David Chesworth, Space-Shifter, 2009. Courtesy the artists and Fehily Contemporary
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DAY 5TUES JAN 17
Theatre Royal
Phillip Adams BalletLab Aviary
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Danny Healy
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
MONA Ferry Terminal
Overboard IIMessing About On Boats
MONA
Stuart Ringholt
MOFO art at the Museum of Old and New Art
DANNY HEALYAUSLocal virtuoso on the sax, clarinets and flutes – playing several new pieces, just for us.
TUESDAY JAN 17, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
STUART RINGHOLT AUSPreceded by a tour of the show by artist Stuart Ringholt. (The artist will be naked. Those who wish to join the tour must also be naked. Adults Only) (2012)
That’s the title of his work. And the content of it. But for the sake of clarity:
Stuart will take you on a naked tour of MONA. Changing facilities provided. Like he says, it’s for grown-ups. Isn’t it ironic.
TUESDAY JAN 17, 6-8PMWEDNESDAY JAN 18, 6-8PMMUSEUM OF OLD AND NEW ARTFREEREGISTER AT WWW.MOFO.NET.AU Image: Stuart Ringholt
OVERBOARD IIMESSING ABOUT ON BOATS
Ticket includes sunset cruise on the MV Cartela (Hobart icon in manner of Mykonos dim sim); campy shenanigans, teetering on the homoerotic; performance by bohemian operatic jazz collective The Lovebirds; cherished memories; and tapas.
TUESDAY JAN 17, 8PMDEPARTS MONA FERRY TERMINALTICKETS $50
Recommended 18+
Image: Stephanie Bailly
GIRL TALK USA
There is a remote chance that something you do now will be good. The chances of it being original, however, are pretty much zero.
Which is why you’d be a fool to miss Girl Talk – the original Grandmaster Flash!!
WEDNESDAY JAN 18, 9PMPW1SUPPORTED BY 22SQTICKETS $35
DAY 6WED JAN 18
This, our biggest commission, is an immersive and remarkable new opera by Constantine Koukias, performed in modern Greek with bilingual narration, the product of a large collaboration of designers, singers and musicians.
Inspired by the poem Waiting for the Barbarians by Constantine Cavafy.
IHOS (it’s Greek for sound).
JAN 18-20, 7.30PMJAN 21 & 22, 2PM & 7.30PMCITY HALLTICKETS $25
Performance contains nudity & adult themes. Recommended 15+
The Barbarians is commissioned by the Museum of Old and New Art
IHOSAUS
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DAY 6WED JAN 18
City Hall
IHOS The Barbarians
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Gilmour Ensemble
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
PW1
Girl Talk
MONA
Stuart Ringholt
MOFO art at the Museum of Old and New Art
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GILMOUR ENSEMBLEAUS WORKSHOP & PERFORMANCEThey will talk about and perform the work of Russell Gilmour.
WEDNESDAY JAN 18, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
DAVID CHESWORTHAUSOCEANOGRAPHY/PERON STATIONAn intimate listening environment created on site at CAST. Oceanography is an almost completely synthesised underwater soundscape. Peron Station, by contrast, is strictly field-recorded, but strikes you as disconcertingly artificial...
OPENING THURSDAY JAN 12, 6PMJAN 13-29, 12-5PMCASTFREE
This project is a partnership between MONA and CAST
Image: David Chesworth, Oceanography/Peron Station, 2011. 4-channel sound installation. Image courtesy the artist and Fehily Contemporary. Digital imaging: Melissa Webb.
22SQAUS Super talented Tassie sax quartet comprised of Benjamin Price, Georgina Smith, Mitchell Ellis and Nicholas Nugent.
WEDNESDAY JAN 18, 7.30PMPW1SUPPORTING GIRL TALKTICKETS $35
Cabaret punks Amanda Palmer and Brian Viglione reform for a rare Australian tour. THURSDAY JAN 19, 9.30PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
DAY 7THURS JAN 19
THE DRESDEN DOLLS USA
Image: Shervin Lainez
PRINCE RAMAUSAA weird combination of Brooklyn noise rock and Hare Krishna psychedelia.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 7.30PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
SENYAWA INDONESIA
Naked vocals and an invented bamboo instrument that sounds sometimes like a harp, and sometimes like cello, sitar or percussion. The music is mixed with stories and dance.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 5.30PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
FRIDAY JAN 20, 9PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DAY 7THURS JAN 19
KELLIE O’DEMPSEY AUSMUTABLE+LUMINOUSKellie draws on a huge scroll of paper alongside bassist/animator Mick Dick, and the Tasmanian Improvised Orchestra.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 8.30PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
Image: Alberto Sanchez
TOSHIMARU NAKAMURA JAPANHe is a ‘no-input sound mixer’, which means he has a sound desk, and manipulates controls without mics, instruments, or any other input. So technology doesn’t enhance the instrument, technology is the instrument. Whoa. Very Marshall McLuhan.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 6.30PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
JULIANNA BARWICK USAJulianna sounds like a choir when she sings, layering her vocals using digital technology.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 2.30PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
Image: Jody Rogac
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DAY 7THURS JAN 19PW1
Andrea Centazzo Mandala
Senyawa
Gilmour Ensemble
Toshimaru Nakamura
Prince Rama
Kellie O’Dempsey
The Dresden Dolls
Cooking Demo
Julianna Barwick
Nell
City Hall
IHOS The Barbarians
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
TANK
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
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Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
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TANK AUSTANK is for Ted (Vining, drums), Alistair (Dobson, sax), Nick (Haywood, bass) and Kelly (Ottaway, piano and vibraphone). Australian jazz.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
COOKING DEMOREALLY BIG PAELLAThat’s a really big paella.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 12.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
GILMOUR ENSEMBLE AUSTasmanian group teaming strange instrumentation with dogged devotion to the music of Russell Gilmour.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 4.30PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
ANDREA CENTAZZO ITALY/USAMANDALAAndrea, percussion master, travelled the world for many years, collecting images. These he will set to live music: improvisation and original compositions. The show revolves around Mandala, the circle centre-piece of Buddhist sacred art forms. There will be a great many gongs.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 3.30PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 3 $25
Presented by the Alcorso Foundation
NELLAUSIT’S A LONG WAY TO THE TOP (IF YOU WANNA ROCK AND ROLL) - HOBART
THE SHOW
Acca Dacca redux! You’ll know it when you hear it, on the streets of Hobart, and at PW1. Performance includes Les, bagpiper from the original 1976 AC/DC film clip.
THURSDAY JAN 19, 2PMPW1FREE
THE MEMORIAL
When the tail-lights have dimmed, the amps been put away... Come and pay your respects at the flatbed truck memorial. Climb in and graffiti your homage to Bon Scott. Leave him an empty bottle of scotch, or a plastic rose. Weep.
THURSDAY JAN 19PW1FREE
FRIDAY JAN 20PW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DAY 8FRI 20 JANDAY 8FRI 20 JAN
AMIINA ICELANDThis six-piece grew from Sigur Ros, for whom they played as a backing band, a string quartet. They’re doing their own thing now. They’ve brought in drummer Magnús Trygvason Eliassen and electronic musician Kippi Kaninus, and some super-impressive instrument-switching shenanigans.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 7PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DEATH GRIPSUSADeath Grips scares the shit out of us.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 10PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
Image: Nicholas Wray
DAY 8FRI JAN 20
LAWRENCE ENGLISH & SCOTT MORRISON AUSOne 11 (refocused)We’ve got a John Cage theme this year, because it’s been twenty years since his death, and also because we love him. This film, by Lawrence English and Scott Morrison, pays homage to Cage’s only major film, which was also the last work he made before he died.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 3PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
NELLAUSCHANTING TO AMPSNell is an artist from Sydney. She does all sorts of things. For us, she’s doing three projects that express her interest in contemporary manifestations of spiritual tradition. Can rock be transcendent? Can anything? Anyhow, come and chant to the amps.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 2PM & 11PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
SATURDAY JAN 21, 6PMTHEATRE ROYALFREE
MICHAELA DAVIES AUSWHILE ROME BURNSMichaela takes our planet’s seismic data and converts it into electricity, which prompts a puppet-like response from the performers’ bodies. How on earth someone thought of this, we don’t know. FRIDAY JAN 20, 4PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25ED KUEPPER &
MARK DAWSONAUSREARRANGEDEd Kuepper co-founded The Saints, and a few other bands, and is now a Bad Seed. Here he’s reunited with long-time collaborator Mark Dawson.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 6PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DAY 8FRI JAN 20
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DAY 8FRI JAN 20
City Hall
IHOS The Barbarians
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Senyawa workshop
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
PW1
Lawrence English & Scott Morrison
Black Jesus Experience
Michaela Davies
Ed Kuepper & Mark Dawson
Amiina
Senyawa
Death Grips
Donny Benét
Nell
David Watson
Cooking Demo
Nell
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
SITE OPENS
FAUX M
OU
ntil late >
BLACK JESUS EXPERIENCEAUSNine-piece Aussie-Ethiopian hip-hop-jazz ensemble.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 4.30PMPW1, STAGE 1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DONNY BENÉTAUS Antonio Giacomelli Benét, the famous Italian accordionist, fell in love with the daughter of his accordion repairer. They made Donny. Donny plans to be the most famous disco accordionist/jazz bassist of the twenty-first century. Get behind him.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 2.30PMPW1, STAGE 2INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
DAVID WATSONNZWatson brings bagpipes into contemporary music. And he’s piped with the best. For us, he’ll be playing with Heath Richardson, along with the City of Hobart and Tasmania Police pipe bands.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 8.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
COOKING DEMOREALLY COLD FOODNitro cuisine. (This food is really cold).
FRIDAY JAN 20, 12.30PMPW1INCLUDED IN FESTIVAL PASS $50OR DAY PASS 4 $25
SENYAWAInstrument-making workshop. See how Bambu Wukir from Indonesian band Senyawa made his bamboo-spear like contraption.
FRIDAY JAN 20, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTREFREE
WORKSHOP
DAY 9SAT JAN 21
PJ HARVEY UK
PJ will be playing songs from the Mercury Prize-winning album Let England Shake, as well as earlier stuff. She’s backed by Mick Harvey, John Parish and Jean-Marc Butty.
SATURDAY JAN 21, 9PM (DOORS 7.30PM)PW1, STAGE 1TICKETS $85
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DAY 9SAT JAN 21PW1
PJ Harvey
St Mary’s Cathedral Centre
Andrea Centazzo & Brian Ritchie
City Hall
IHOS The Barbarians
IHOS The Barbarians
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
Theatre Royal
Amiina Animagica
Amiina Animagica
NellPaint Your Golden FacetUnE-yArDs
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-ShifterD
etached
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
FAUX M
O
MoM
a M
ON
A Rooftop
Until late >
PAINT YOUR GOLDEN FACE AUS A noisy Tassie duo doing some pretty cool things with bass drums and tape loops. ‘Pig Face’ to their fans. SATURDAY JAN 21, 6PMTHEATRE ROYALFREE
tUnE-yArDs USAHeadlining a wild ride at the Royal!! (See Paint Your Golden Face and Nell’s Chanting to Amps).
tUnE-yArDs makes drum loops on the spot, then adds ukulele and other instruments, building the music in the course of the performance. Raw and intense.
SATURDAY JAN 21, 6PMTHEATRE ROYALFREE
tUnE-yArDs is supported by the United States Consulate
ANDREA CENTAZZO & BRIAN RITCHIEITALY/USA/AUSGong master Andrea Centazzo joins Brian Ritchie on the shakuhachi for an improvisation concert at the St Mary’s Cathedral Centre. SATURDAY JAN 21, 6PMST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTRE FREE
Presented by the Alcorso Foundation
AMIINA ICELANDANIMAGICAAmiina play live to films by early twentieth-century animator Lotte Reiniger: Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Aladdin and the Magic Lamp. It looks like shadow puppetry and sounds like magic. Bring children should you have them.
SATURDAY JAN 21, 11AM & 1.30PMTHEATRE ROYALFREE
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DAY 10SUN JAN 22
St Mary’s Cathedral
Chris Abrahams, Sabine Vogel & David Watson
City Hall
IHOS The Barbarians
IHOS The Barbarians
David C
hesworth O
ceanography/Peron Station C
AST
Detached
Sonia Leber & D
avid Chesworth
Space-Shifter
MO
FO art at the M
useum of O
ld and New Art
MO
NA
FAUX M
OU
ntil late >
CHRIS ABRAHAMS, SABINE VOGEL & DAVID WATSONAUS/GERMANY/NZChris, on the organ, is normally a pianist for The Necks, and Sabine’s a contemporary flautist. They’re joined by David Watson on the bagpipes. Surely a strange and compelling encounter.
SUNDAY JAN 22, 3PMST MARY’S CATHEDRALFREE
MoMaMONA market on the roof of the museum. Starts Jan 21, then ongoing.
There’s yummy food, fresh produce, live music, demos, workshops, and beanbags on which to slump in the sun.
MoMa – only slightly shitter than Salamanca market. Much, much shitter than the MoMA in New York.
FROM SATURDAY JAN 21, 1.30-6.30PMMONA ROOFTOP
THANK YOU
MONA FOMA PRODUCED BY MONA IN CONJUNCTION WITH INSITE ARTS CONTACT US: O3 6277 9900 [email protected]
JOIN THE MAILING LIST: WWW.MONA.NET.AU
OCEANOGRAPHY PRESENTED BYANDREA CENTAZZO PRESENTED BYSPACE-SHIFTER PRESENTED BY
MEDIA PARTNER PRINTED BY
PARTNERS
MONA FOMA IS A PROJECT OF MONA SUPPORTED BY THE TASMANIAN GOVERNMENT THROUGH EVENTS TASMANIA
MONA FOMA HOLIDAY PACKAGES AVAILABLE THROUGH
FAUX MO SUPPORTED BYVENUE PARTNERS
IHOS ACKNOWLEDGES THE SUPPORT OF
BALLETLAB ACKNOWLEDGES THE SUPPORT OF
THANK YOU TO
TUBA SKINNY AND tUnE yArDS ARE SUPPORTED BY THE UNITED STATES CONSULATE
ELIZABETH ST
MELVILL
E ST
BATHURST S
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BRISBANE ST
ARGYLE ST
LEGEND
TOILETS
EMERGENCYASSEMBLY AREA
FERRY
1
PLAY AREA
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ART/STAGE
ELIZABETH ST
MURRAY STHARRINGTON ST
ARGYLE ST
LIVER
POOL S
TCOLL
INS ST
BARRACK ST
CAMPBELL ST
BRISBANE STPATR
ICK ST
MELVILL
E STBAT
HURST ST
WARWICK STELIZABETH ST
TASMA ST
BURNETT ST
DAVEY
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SALAMANCA PLCASTRAY ESP
SALAMANCA PL
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ELIZABETH ST PIER
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CAST27 TASMA ST
ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL& ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL CENTRE164 HARRINGTON ST
THEATRE ROYAL29 CAMPBELL ST
DETACHED7 CAMPBELL ST
BAHA’I CENTRE1 TASMAN HIGHWAY
MONA BROOKE STFERRY TERMINAL(HOBART)
PRINCES WHARF 1 (PW1)FESTIVAL HUBCASTRAY ESPLANADE
HOBART
CITY HALL57 MACQUARIE ST
OPENING NIGHT STREET PARTYCNR ELIZABETH ST & MELVILLE ST
MOFO VENUES
PW1
STREET PARTY
HOBART
FERRY TO MONA
ENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
FOODThere will be some, a lot in fact.
DRINKBuy it, drink it. Show your ID. No BYO, obviously!
MONA FERRY30 minutes from the MONA Brooke St ferry terminal (Hobart)$15 return per person
Bookings www.mona.net.au03 6223 6064
Depart Hobart9.30am, 11am, 12pm, 1.30pm, 2.30pm, 4.30pm, 5.30pm, 6.45pm*
Depart MONA10am, 11.30am, 12.45pm, 2pm, 3.30pm, 5pm, 6pm, 7.30pm*
*subject to demand
MONA ROMA BUSCoach transfer from the MONA Brooke St ferry terminal (Hobart)$15 return per person
Bookings 03 6223 6064
Depart Hobart10am, 1pm, 3.30pm
Depart MONA4.30pm
BIKEHire one at the MONA Brooke St ferry terminal (Hobart) or at MONA$15 per person
CARParking is free, but there’s not much of it
TAXITaxi United 131 008Taxi Combined 132 227Yellow Cabs 131 924
BUSMetro bus numbers 36, 37, 42 and X1 pass MONA Call 13 22 01 for timetables
Museum of Old and New Art655 Main Rd, BerriedaleHobart, Tasmania 7011
STAGE 1
STAGE 2
BAR FOOD BAR
BAR FOODENTRANCE
MONA FOOD
FOOD
BAR
1
1
STAGE
WAREHOUSE
BOX OFFICE
GETTING TO MONA
FORECOURT
WWW.MOFO.NET.AU
Image: Robin Fox