public program, emerging producer 2021

Fringe 2021: FRANK. Theatre, 'The Baroque'

Adelaide Fringe Show

When: March 3-7, 9pm; March 10-14, 7:30pm

Where: The Mill Breakout Space, 154 Angas St (enter via Gunson St), Kaurna Yerta

Price: $25 + booking fee

  • The Mill is an accessible space. Disability access is available via Angas St, and a disability toilet is also available. If you have any questions or additional accessibility requirements, please contact us at info@themilladelaide.com


The Baroque is running free in hedge mazes and dancing in champagne fountains. Bursting with silliness, Swedish clown Oliver Nilsson (The Latebloomers, Scotland! and The Bakers) will charm and titillate in this rollercoaster of stupidity, slapstick and the sublime. Curtains draw! Lights up! BEHOLD! This is The Baroque!

Directed by Britt Plummer (Chameleon by FRANK. Theatre), The Mill and Adelaide Fringe 'Centre Stage Residency' Recipient 2020.

public program, emerging producer 2021

Fringe 2021: Post Dining, 'Eating Tomorrow'

A person points their finger while holding a glass, they wear a fluffy hat, a white cardigan and a dress. They're standing in front of a tropical backdrop and have heavy stage makeup on.

Adelaide Fringe Show

When: February 19-28, 4:00pm -8:30pm

Where: WEA Adult Learning, 223 Angas Street, Kaurna Yerta

Price: $49 + booking fee ($44 concession + booking fee)


Have you ever wondered what the future might look like? Feel like? Taste like?

Eating Tomorrow is a back-to-the-future time travel experiment, immersing audiences in prospective scenarios of what our food systems, customs and behaviours might become in the next fifty years.

In Post Dining's most daring and exciting immersive food experience yet, come and be enveloped into a journey of the senses. With support from the Department of the Premier and Cabinet through Arts South Australia and Adelaide Fringe.


the move, public program, expand

The Move 2021


Photographer: Alexander Waite Mitchell

Performance

When: Thursday April 22 to Saturday 24, 7:00pm
Where: Space Theatre at Adelaide Festival Centre, King William St, Kaurna Yerta
Duration: 1 hour


We're absolutely thrilled to announce tickets are on sale for The Move, a curated initiative of Dance Hub SA, The Mill and Ausdance SA, presented by Adelaide Festival Centre.

In April 2021, commissioned choreographers Gabrielle Nankivell and Lewis Major will unveil their world premiere works in an enthralling dance double bill, ranging from the innovative wit of Nankivell's Wonder Grit through to the visceral intensity of Major's Satori.



This program has support from

 
 

sponsored studio, sponsored studio recipien

Sponsored Studio 2021: Holly Childs

The Mill is thrilled to announce Holly Childs as the recipient of the Sponsored Studio for the January-June residency.

The Mill’s Sponsored Studio is a new initiative supported by Drs Geoff and Sorayya Martin, and an anonymous philanthropist beginning in 2021. Two selected artists will join our community, with each receiving 6-months of studio space and an exhibition outcome as part of The Mill Showcase.

  • Holly Childs is a writer and artist. Her research involves filtering stories of computation through frames of ecology, earth, memory, poetry, and light. In 2020, she was an associate artist at Jacuzzi dance space, Amsterdam; and alongside Gediminas Žygus she released Hydrangea (Subtext), an album exploring narrative fracture and reality bubbles. She is the author of two books: No Limit (Hologram) and Danklands (Arcadia Missa), and is a former Gertrude Contemporary studio holder (Melbourne), an alumna of The New Normal (Media, Architecture and Design) programme at Strelka Institute, Moscow, and she holds a Masters in Film, Design and Politics from Sandberg Instituut, Amsterdam. She has been in residence at Arcadia Missa (London), RM (Auckland), Firstdraft (Sydney), Rupert (Vilnius), and DAR (Druskininkai). She is currently writing her third book, What Causes Flowers Not to Bloom?; teaching in the Graphic Design department at Rietveld Academie, Amsterdam; and developing Cliffhanger, a text, installation, and choreographic collaboration with Angela Goh.

Image courtesy of the artist


Outcomes

public program, gallery I

Exhibition: Chris Herzfeld & Erin Fowler, '10th Anniversary Collection'


Image: Chris Herzfeld (Photographer ) and Erin Fowler (Model/dancer) (detail), 2020, Giclee, 1100x800

March 10- 21, 2021

Opening event: Sunday, March 14, 3:30-5pm


This exhibition celebrates 10 years of collaboration between renowned photographer Chris Herzfeld and dancer Erin Fowler. Creative collaborations such as these are immensely valuable to artists practice, and Chris and Erin have shown how strong creative relationship can grow and develop over time. Both have spent the past 10 years becoming attuned to each other’s practice, and are able to work intuitively as well as push each other to grow. In this series of portraits we see Erin’s incredible skill as a dancer and model showcased by Chris’ photography. Both have also made significant contributions to The Mill, Erin as Co-Founder and Chris as a long term supporter and contributor to our programming. Through this series of images we celebrate their collaboration, and also thank them for their continued contribution to the Adelaide creative sector!

  • CHRIS : I’ve been really fortunate over the last 17 years to have collaborated with some fantastic dancers and artists on some really special projects. But it’s always super special when you reach a big milestone as I have done in 2020 with Erin Fowler. 10 years ago we started helping each other out on projects and over the years our relationship has morphed into fully collaborating in setting up and executing projects together.

    Ok, maybe there been a few cakes eaten along the way as well to satisfy the 3pm sugar craving but it’s been an incredible, thoroughly rewarding & enjoyable journey working with Erin over the last 10 years. We’ve created a diverse range of projects over that time with memorable outcomes. A massive thanks to Erin, Kyra and all of those we’ve dragged into our vortex over the years.

    ERIN : Chris, Kyra and I have been working together on dance photography collaborations since 2010. Together we have developed an attuned and creative approach to creating shots. Both Chris and I enjoy working relatively quickly and intuitively and I think that this approach results in very alive and energised shots.

    At the beginning of 2020 Chris, Kyra and I decided that we would create 10 new projects for our 10th year of working together. These projects range from dance to fashion, as promotional shoots for dance projects and lots in between. We’ve shot in the studio & on location, here in South Australia and around the world. This exhibition is a small sample of the 20+ collections we have created together.

  • Established in 2003 by Chris Herzfeld, Camlight Productions is a unique business that provides photography, cinematography and lighting services. Chris works extensively in the arts and in particular throughout the Australian dance industry as a photographer & a cinematographer.

    Chris’s images are a fusion of fashion and dance. Drawing on the distinctive range of movement and shapes of dance in combination with the more traditional modelling poses, the image embodies a sense of drama, poise and style. This unique style creates images that have a sense of narrative within them. Chris likes to leave it to the viewer to use their imagination to create that story. In a world where digital manipulation and compositing are commonplace in photography Chris's approach is more classical, with an emphasis on lighting, colours and composition with the look of minimal post production processing. His images take on a 3D appearance so the viewer feels as if they are present in the location watching the action happen before their eyes. 

  • Erin Fowler is an Australian artist working across the dance, theatre, music and film industries. She creates and presents deeply feminine, audience driven, socially minded work. Erin is a multi-faceted performer that blends together an eclectic mix of contemporary dance, theatre, music, clowning and martial arts. Erin’s choreographic credits includes FEMME, (2019 Adelaide Fringe - Best Dance Award. 2020 Adelaide Fringe – Made in Adelaide award), and toured to Reykjavik, Edinburgh & Stockholm. Other works include Gen- y (2018) commissioned for the Adelaide Dance Festival; Epoch (2016) created on Australian Dance Theatre for their Ignition season; and the dance film, Gaia (2014), which has currently screened in over 23 international film festivals.

    Erin is a qualified Qoya teacher (a holistic movement practice for women) as well as a facilitator of women’s circles and women’s embodiment practices. Through her new NFO company The Gaia Movement, she is currently working with a number of international schools and partner organisations to develop a school education program and community engagement strategy bason on Gaia.


masterclass series, public program

Adelaide Fringe Masterclass: The Latebloomers, ‘Discover Your Inner Idiot’

Masterclass

When: Wednesday, March 17, 2021, 11am - 1pm

Venue: The Mill Breakout, The Mill 154 Angas Street, Adelaide

Cost: $23

  • The Mill is an accessible space. Disability access is available via Angas St, and a disability toilet is also available. If you have any questions or additional accessibility requirements, please contact us at info@themilladelaide.com


The Mill in partnership with Adelaide Fringe present a masterclass with performers The Latebloomers.

The Latebloomers are an international company of performers who met at the Jacques Lecoq International Theatre School in Paris.

About the Masterclass:

This masterclass caters for either professional performers wanting to learn new skills for their repertoire or brush up on the art of 'play' or beginners/amateurs wanting to have some fun, build confidence and discover new skills. A brief introduction to clown including a Lecoq style physical warm-up with improv games, characterisation, improvisation and slapstick.

  • The Latebloomers are an international company of performers who met at the Jacques Lecoq International Theatre School in Paris. Their work draws on training in physical theatre, clown and mime. Their first show 'Scotland!' has toured to multiple countries in Europe and Australia, winning awards at the Adelaide, Prague and Paris Fringe festivals.


public program, gallery II

Exhibition: The Mill Showcase


January 13 - March 5, 2021

Opening event: Friday, January 22, 5:30pm to 7:30pm


The Mill Showcase is a gallery space dedicated to artists who work in our studio spaces at our Angas Street location, exhibiting some of the artworks and products that have been produced under our roof. The Mill Showcase profiles our artists, so that you can put a face to the name and get to know some of our dedicated makers.

This fourth edition of The Mill Showcase features work by Kirsty Martinsen, Steel Chronis and Evie Hassiotis.


About the artists:

  • Steel Chronis is an emerging artist, working and living on Kaurna land, who works across various media in their practice. Their work typically focuses on the mundane and macabre with consideration of the fleeting nature of time. Their work is often a preservation of structures, subjects and moments, highlighting the beauty of the ordinary. Steel has had a studio at The Mill since 2020.

    These works are a segment of my investigation into various types of inks and application styles of the medium. The parameters of this exercise were to work with a brush, gesturally and within the compositional limitations of a landscape orientation. The works presented utilise Indian Ink, an ink that can be applied in an diverse manner - either thinned out, layered or painted thickly to achieve a dramatic black. What makes this ink unique is that it is made with a shellac gum binder, giving the ink a unique brilliance and a high level of water resistance. 

  • Evie Hassiotis is an Adelaide based artist who works intuitively with textures and mixed media, photography and improvised dance. Evie believes in the potential of art to emotionally heal the human soul and to promote spiritual growth in the art practitioner and in the viewer. Improvised movement together with her art practice have been an avenue to express spirituality, creativity and art as a healing practice. Evie has had a studio at The Mill since 2019.

    These prints were nearly all created in 2020 during the social and physical restrictions enacted in response to Coronavirus. This series reflect on the metaphorical masks most of us wear every day, masks we wear to cover our true selves, whatever our reasons. These works offer an observation of human behaviour and what people choose to reveal and not to reveal to others and themselves.

  • Kirsty Martinsen’s practice is predominantly drawing and painting, and recently as a Writer/Director of the short documentary, Limited Surrender, with SBS and SA Film Corporation. She has a BA Visual Art from SA School of Art (UniSA) and Dip. Painting from New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture, has exhibited in USA, Australia and Amsterdam. Kirsty Martinsen has had a studio at The Mill since 2014.

    In the middle of a pandemic I had moved into an apartment on the 11th floor, looking West. During this period of self-isolation, I began doing a daily pastel drawing of the setting sun. Every day the sky is different, sometimes the sun pops out from behind the cloud and looks like it is being born. Seeing the sunsets grouped together you can trace changes in season, and my thinking about light. 

public program, spotlight residency, theatre residency

Spotlight Residency: Adrianne Semmens and Jennifer Eadie showing, 'Unravel'


Showing and Q&A

When: Friday, January 15, 2021, 6pm

Where: The Mill Breakout Space, 154 Angas Street, (enter via Gunson Street)

Duration: 1 hour (including Q+A)

Cost: Free


Unravel is a first stage development of multi-disciplinary work exploring identity and connection to place that is enabled through embodied movement and text. 

This project builds upon a collaboration between dance practitioner Adrianne Semmens and writer Jennifer Eadie and the publication created together, Unravel, facilitated by The Mill’s Writer in Residence program, and commissioned by Delving into Dance in partnership with Critical Path as part of the 2019/20 Digital Interchange Festival.

The project explores what it means to acknowledge a sense of disconnection-connection to place, exploring through memories, agitations and the calling for deeper connections to ancestral country.

About the artists:

  • Adrianne Semmens is a dance practitioner with experience working across the arts, education and community sectors. Adrianne is a descendant of the Barkindji People of NSW and a graduate of NAISDA Dance College and Adelaide College of the Arts. 

    Identity and place continue to be reoccurring themes within Adrianne’s practice, investigated throughout her own choreographic explorations and community based projects to embody place and memory, and interrogate social constructs.

    Choreographic highlights include Thread (2020), created for The World’s Smallest Stage, in collaboration with Australian Dance Theatre, and engagement in Dance Epidemic (2018), creating a site specific work on a group of international youth dancers as part Creative Gatherings for Panpapanalya, Joint Dance Congress.                                                              

    Adrianne’s professional experience also includes her role as a Dance Presenter for The Australian Ballet’s Dance Education Ensemble, as a performer for Gina Rings, Jo Clancy, Jade Erlandsen, Cathy Adamek and recent performances for Dance Rites, choreographed by Kaine Sultan-Babij. Passionate about dance education and the role of dance in maintaining wellbeing, Adrianne has worked on many youth focused initiatives, including projects for Kurruru Arts and Culture Hub, Carclew, University of South Australia, Department for Education and Ausdance SA.

  • Jennifer Eadie is a writer and artist living and working on Kaurna Yerta in South Australia. She is a graduate of UNSW Art & Design. Currently, an academic at UniSA and PhD candidate in the Assemblage Centre for Creative Arts at Flinders University.  Her creative practice is primarily text and installation based: combining word, image, video, and found objects. 

    Her writing and art has been published in CORDITE Poetry Review, criticalpath, Educational Philosophy and Theory, Borderlands e-journal, Extempore and Frankie Magazine

Adrianne smiles at the camera, her hand holds her elbow across her front and she wears a black top.
Jennier looks at the camera, she has long flowing hair and wears black clothing.

public program, masterclass series

The Critic’s Craft: Writing engaging and ethical arts criticism


January 22 and January 23, 2021

When: 1pm to 3pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St

Cost: $20 + booking fee (attend both for $30 + booking fee using discount code)

  • The Mill is an accessible space. Disability access is available via Angas St, and a disability toilet is also available. If you have any questions or additional accessibility requirements, please contact us at info@themilladelaide.com


Presented by The Mill and Jess Martin, this two part workshop series will guide participants through the essential skills of writing engaging and generous arts criticism, including how to develop a critical voice and start getting published as a reviewer.

About the workshops:

Workshop One, January 22: Pitching and Structure for Arts Reviews

This workshop will cover the ins and outs of choosing what to write about and pitching to publications. We will also get into how to structure a review to achieve clarity, word length, and the expectations of publishers. Workshop One will deliver local industry knowledge for getting published as well as the key skills to get started as a reviewer.

Workshop Two, January 23: Writing Approaches and the Ethics of Arts Criticism

Workshop Two is all about the skills to make your writing stand out and develop toward a career as a generous and engaging arts critic. This workshop will also discuss how to make responsible choices in writing positive and negative reviews, and how to find bold and interesting angles to write from. We’ll get into the nitty gritty of writing techniques, how to frame feedback for performers, as well as how to get readers’ attention and keep them on the hook for your whole review.

  • Jess Martin is a freelance writer and interdisciplinary artist based on Kaurna land in Adelaide. They have extensive experience as an arts critic, published in The Adelaide Review, Witness Performance, and Fest Magazine among others. Jess is interested in experimental performance, sharing experiences of queerness and disability, and making work in regional contexts. They also have experience facilitating creative projects and workshops as a poet, performer and textile artist. Jess is currently Writer in Residence at The Mill, and was programmed in National Young Writers’ Festival 2020.


public program, gallery I

Exhibition: Carolyn Corletto, 'Random Acts of Obsession: The Artist as the Collector'


January 11 - February 21, 2021

Opening event:
Friday, January 22, 5:30-7:30pm

Artist talk and Fringissage:
Sunday, February 21, 1pm-3pm


The Mill’s 2021 Exhibition Space program opens with Random Acts of Obsession: The Artist as the Collector, a new body of work by multidisciplinary artist Carolyn Corletto. Working with found materials, paint, clay, thread and words, Carolyn has created a personal Wunderkammer. Following her compulsion to obsessively collect, she uses discarded domestic objects and ephemeral natural objects as sites for material investigation. The objects of her collections are often found while walking through public space and parklands, then taken back to the studio to be reimagined, investigated, and imbued with memories. Carolyn’s process speaks to the affinity that she holds with her collection, as material objects but also repositories of identity and memory, ‘I respond to the call of things’ she says.

  • I often find myself inhabiting the liminal space between passion and obsession, where collection becomes compulsion. Discarded objects begin to speak to me of a new accumulative value. Motives for collecting or over-collecting vary and combine differently for each collector. For me the selection of an object worthy of collection is rooted in memory and biography. The fixation becomes physical with the need to hunt, to store (sometimes display) and inevitably (for me) the need to make something. My art practice is an emotional response to my experience of the landscape and the materiality of the objects I collect as I move through it. I usually find myself focussing on the smallest objects, appreciating their unique properties and design. In my mind anything can become something else through the ministrations of conceptual meditation. Connections are made between found objects and material processes as they assert their status as saved, rehabilitated or collected.

     In this exhibition I have created works that are inextricable from the process itself. Expanding on my finalist work in the Parklands Art Prize I have continued my daily walk through the Parklands and other green spaces, collecting tiny specimens of natural materials or domestic debris and making a one inch wheel thrown ceramic vessel for each object. As the vessels contain my daily thoughts I have found the clay responding differently each day into a myriad of iterations. During Covid restrictions when obsession with making was able to take hold undistracted or tempered by reason I came to appreciate the sense of control these occupations afforded in times of uncertainty, the curative effect before the compulsion returns.

     This exhibition embodies a response to my wanderings, my research and the interior landscape of my personal obsessions, all the while mining childhood memories of lying on the grass gazing through the tracery of trees. With deliberate energy each work offers an acutely focussed encounter and collaboration with an environment balanced between vulnerability and resilience. By bringing materials out of their habitat and into the gallery, recontextualising with a mindful counter of tension and tenderness, I confirm that my eyes are open to the urgency of fragility. 

  • Carolyn Corletto is an emerging multidisciplinary artist working in the fields of painting, sculpture, textiles, ceramics and assemblage. Using found materials, paint, clay, thread and words she contemplates and prospects the materiality of discarded domestic objects and ephemoral natural objects as repositories of identity and memory.  Since graduating with Honours from Adelaide Central School of Art she has been actively exhibiting both in South Australia and interstate including being selected by Guildhouse to exhibit her Honours work in a solo show. 

    The last 3 years have been highly productive for Corletto. She was a finalist in the Waterhouse Natural Science Art Prize, the Broken Hill Outback Art Prize and the Parklands Art Prize and was awarded the Wilson Wine Label Commission through the Helpmann Academy. This year she was a finalist in both the Don Dunstan Award and the Adelaide City Incubator Award during the 2020 SALA Festival. Corletto is currently working out of Collective Haunt Studios and has recently been awarded a Diderot Scholarship towards a residency in France that will be taken up after the lifting of travel restrictions.

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: Danny Jarratt, ‘FlatWorld 64’

Flatworld 64 is a new series of paintings by digital artist Danny Jarratt. Co-opting the design language of 90’s collect-a-thon video games, Danny invites audiences to step into a flattened, graphic world. He offers audiences a momentary escape from the noise of navigating heteronormative daily life. This series of bright, digital paintings are made up of gestures and painterly marks translated into a digital realm. Low-resolution and pixelated graphic shapes sit alongside digital airbrush and drop shadows, giving a sense of collapsed perspective and a non hierarchical plane of existence. Danny describes them as ‘perhaps paintings, or perhaps screenshots’ of a queer videogame landscape.

Photos: Morgan Sette

Within these worlds there were valuable objects to collect: Golden Jigsaws, Golden Bananas and Golden Stars. The worlds were filled with collectables and quickly the player would learn the lore of the land and develop a spatial understanding of the world and a connection to the place and self. In searching for these objects, I became connected. I feel deep attachments to Donkey Kong 64’s Jungle Japes and Super Mario 64’s Tick Tock Clock. All these spaces are queer escapes, where identity is transformative and always resistant.

This body of work portrays the world as flattened and paused, populated with unseen people, remnants of buildings and rare Ghost Diamonds.

Photographer: Will Adams.

Artist statement

Through my heteronormative childhood, I found the media landscape of television oppressive. I was told to sit in front of the ‘idiot box’ and be a passive viewer. However, with the introduction of the Nintendo 64 and collect-a-thon video games the television transformed from passive to collaborative experience. Through role playing games my identity shifted from repressed to forever-in-flux: I could be male, female, a bear and/or a bird. As I inhabited these avatars I would explore different worlds including jungles, ruins, factories or outer space.

Photographer: Will Adams

The player/audience is given reprieve from heteronormative noise and left with a peaceful queer silence; a moment in the game where everything stops. The bright colours and silence offer a zen and meditative escape. Unlike the video games which inspire them, this space does not reward the player/audience with level progression or bosses to fight. Instead you're rewarded with a better understanding of this queer environment, a search for diamonds and a queered quiet & flow.

emerging producer

Emerging Producer Xchange: Announcing the successful 2021 recipient

We're excited to announce Peta Spurling-Brown as the 2021 associate of the Emerging Producer Xchange.

The Emerging Producer Xchange is a flagship mentorship program by Metro Arts with the support of The Ian Potter Foundation. Between January – November, Peta will support the delivery of The Mill’s annual artistic programs, supporting artists in the creation, presentation and touring of new work.

  • Peta Spurling-Brown is a live performance producer and artist manager currently based in Adelaide.

    Following a foundation in performance, Peta’s arts administration experience started as marketing and events roles at Adelaide Fringe 2009-2013.

    In 2013, Peta packed her bags for Edinburgh, splitting her time between the two largest arts festivals in the world. In 2015, Peta was approached by several artists to produce their work and her company, Hey Boss, was born.


writers in residence

Writer in Residence 2021: Tanner Muller

The Mill is thrilled to announce Tanner Muller as the recipient of the City Mag 2021 Writer in Residence January-June residency.

The Writer in Residence program, in partnership with CityMag, supports emerging writers from a variety of disciplines. The program creates a broader audience for writing through leadership, mentorship and publication.

  • Tanner Muller is a queer writer from Adelaide, South Australia. His work has appeared in GLAM Adelaide, Anti Heroin Chic, and The Serenade Files, among others. His self-published collection of interrelated stories ‘under/Limelight’ (2020) is available through Amazon Kindle and Apple iBooks.

    He holds a BA Honours in English and Creative Writing from UniSA. You can usually find him typing on his laptop or slurring his words at an open mic.

Photo: Daniel Sutherland


Read the articles

writers in residence, scotch college residency

Writer in Residence 2021: James Murphy

The Mill is thrilled to announce James Murphy as the recipient of the City Mag 2021 Writer in Residence July-December residency.

The Writer in Residence program, in partnership with CityMag, supports emerging writers from a variety of disciplines. The program creates a broader audience for writing through leadership, mentorship and publication.

  • James Murphy has worked as a South Australian Arts, Music and Gaming Writer for Scenestr- 2015-present,
    contributed to InDaily, Junkee Media's The Upsider, City Mag's The City Standard, The Serenade Files, Fritz Mag, and Fight News Australia (which is a bit left field, but he likes his cage fighting).

    James has written national cover stories for Scenestr, most recently on Megan Washington, interviewed and covered artists and artistic directors from State Opera, State Theatre, OzAsia and more.


Read the articles

public program, spotlight residency, theatre residency

Spotlight Residency: Adrianne Semmens and Jennifer Eadie, 'Unravel'

Unravel is a first stage development of multi-disciplinary work exploring identity and connection to place that is enabled through embodied movement and text. 

This project builds upon a collaboration between dance practitioner Adrianne Semmens and writer Jennifer Eadie and the publication created together, Unravel,  facilitated by The Mill’s Writer in Residence program, and commissioned by Delving into Dance in partnership with Critical Path as part of the 2019/20 Digital Interchange Festival.

The project explores what it means to acknowledge a sense of disconnection-connection to place, exploring through memories, agitations and the calling for deeper connections to ancestral country.

 
A piece of writing is shown against a charcoal background.
 

About the artists:

  • Adrianne Semmens is a dance practitioner with experience working across the arts, education and community sectors. Adrianne is a descendant of the Barkindji People of NSW and a graduate of NAISDA Dance College and Adelaide College of the Arts. 

    Identity and place continue to be reoccurring themes within Adrianne’s practice, investigated throughout her own choreographic explorations and community based projects to embody place and memory, and interrogate social constructs.

    Choreographic highlights include Thread (2020), created for The World’s Smallest Stage, in collaboration with Australian Dance Theatre, and engagement in Dance Epidemic (2018), creating a site specific work on a group of international youth dancers as part Creative Gatherings for Panpapanalya, Joint Dance Congress.                                                              

    Adrianne’s professional experience also includes her role as a Dance Presenter for The Australian Ballet’s Dance Education Ensemble, as a performer for Gina Rings, Jo Clancy, Jade Erlandsen, Cathy Adamek and recent performances for Dance Rites, choreographed by Kaine Sultan-Babij. Passionate about dance education and the role of dance in maintaining wellbeing, Adrianne has worked on many youth focused initiatives, including projects for Kurruru Arts and Culture Hub, Carclew, University of South Australia, Department for Education and Ausdance SA.

  • Jennifer Eadie is a writer and artist living and working on Kaurna Yerta in South Australia. She is a graduate of UNSW Art & Design. Currently, an academic at UniSA and PhD candidate in the Assemblage Centre for Creative Arts at Flinders University.  Her creative practice is primarily text and installation based: combining word, image, video, and found objects. 

    Her writing and art has been published in CORDITE Poetry Review, criticalpath, Educational Philosophy and Theory, Borderlands e-journal, Extempore and Frankie Magazine

    Her artwork was included in the third Mill Showcase.

Adrianne smiles at the camera, her hand holds her elbow across her front and she wears a black top.
Jennier looks at the camera, she has long flowing hair and wears black clothing.

public program, gallery I

Exhibition: Danny Jarratt, 'FlatWorld 64'


November 6 – December 18, 2020

Opening event: Friday, November 13, 5:30-7:30pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


Flatworld 64 is a new series of paintings by digital artist Danny Jarratt. Co-opting the design language of 90’s collect-a-thon video games, Danny invites audiences to step into a flattened, graphic world. He offers audiences a momentary escape from the noise of navigating heteronormative daily life. This series of bright, digital paintings are made up of gestures and painterly marks translated into a digital realm. Low-resolution & pixelated graphic shapes sit alongside digital airbrush and drop shadows, giving a sense of collapsed perspective and a non hierarchical plane of existence. Danny describes them as ‘perhaps paintings, or perhaps screenshots’ of a queer videogame landscape.

  • Through my heteronormative childhood, I found the media landscape of television oppressive. I was told to sit in front of the ‘idiot box’ and be a passive viewer. However, with the introduction of the Nintendo 64 and collect-a-thon video games the television transformed from passive to collaborative experience. Through role playing games my identity shifted from repressed to forever-in-flux: I could be male, female, a bear and/or a bird. As I  inhabited these avatars I would explore different worlds including jungles, ruins, factories or outer space. 

    Within these worlds there were valuable objects to collect: Golden Jigsaws, Golden Bananas and Golden Stars. The worlds were filled with collectables and quickly the player would learn the lore of the land and develop a spatial understanding of the world and a connection to the place and self. In searching for these objects, I became connected. I feel deep attachments to Donkey Kong 64’s Jungle Japes and Super Mario 64’s Tick Tock Clock. All these spaces are queer escapes, where identity is transformative and always resistant. 

    This body of work portrays the world as flattened and paused, populated with unseen people, remnants of buildings and rare Ghost Diamonds. The player/audience is given reprieve from heteronormative noise and left with a peaceful queer silence; a moment in the game where everything stops. The bright colours and silence offer a zen and meditative escape. Unlike the video games which inspire them, this space does not reward the player/audience with level progression or bosses to fight. Instead you're rewarded with a better understanding of this queer environment, a search for diamonds and a queered quiet & flow.

  • Danny Jarratt (b. 1990 Kaurna Land, Adelaide) is an emerging queer digital artist exploring installation art. His work reflects a keen interest in the intersection of pop culture, queer theory and resistance. His installations function as micro-utopias and queer counterpublics which allow people to escape the imposing day to day ideologies and expectations, with fun and convenient methods, such as videogame design. He graduated at the University of South Australia with Bachelor of Art & Design (Honours) and recently finished a residency with George Street Studios. Jarratt’s emerging practice has exhibited locally at FELTspace, MOD., Praxis Artspace, Fontanelle Gallery and The Adelaide Festival Theatre Media Screens. He recently undertook his first interstate solo exhibition Neo Glitch City at Seventh Gallery and has international features in group exhibitions at MOM-us Experimental Center for the Arts in Greece, Dovetail Gallery in North England and was a finalist in the STARVD art prize in Singapore.

Exhibition Catalogue: 'Postcards from Motherhood'

PfMprint copy3.jpg
PfMprint+copy.jpg

Artist statements and biographies

Curator Tanya Voges

Wish you were here…’

A postcard is sent from a place you visit, not the place you normally inhabit. 

For this exhibition I’ve invited  mothers who are practicing artists throughout the early years of motherhood to create work about the process and time of life we are in. The resulting works across a broad spectrum of mediums are influenced by inhabiting motherhood, yet not prescriptively about the act of mothering. This exhibition embraces the connections that these artists have to their families and because of that focus on creating life, respects that there is multiplicity at play in their practice. 

Multidisciplinary Artist Tanya Voges creates choreography for theatre and gallery spaces which invite audiences to engage, participate, feel immersed and explore trace. Tanya works and resides on the unceded lands of the Peramangk peoples of the Adelaide Hills. She is part of the Artist Residence in Motherhood and has created an alternative mothers' group MAMAA- Mother Artists Making Art, Australia which has both an online community and studio sharing in Adelaide. Engaging with collaborators of various disciplines Tanya brings her experience in dance, drawing, community engagement and dance film making to make multimedia performance works, live dance pieces and dance for screen.

Bridget Currie

Image: ‘one.another’ 2020, durational performance with 10kg weight Media: series of digital photographs of movement sequence, (photographer: Morgan Sette, courtesy of the artist)

‘one.another’ references documentation tropes from Conceptual art of the 1960s. This work invites you to imagine the act of carrying a baby as a durational performance, made by the artist everyday from her child’s birth to their mastery of walking. The movements in this sequence are derived from everyday activities undertaken while carrying a child in arms. I am interested in the forms created by sharing weight, interruption and balancing; considerations that have been a large part of my sculptural and performance practice for many years. Approaching the process of childcare and mothering through formal aesthetic and conceptual considerations feels freeing, while these images are certainly of a mother and child, with all the emotional baggage that can bring, they can also be read as reclaiming the territory of motherhood as part of a history of conceptual and performance art.

Bridget Currie works across a range of modalities including sculpture, performance, drawing, writing, public art and installation. Her art practice is process oriented. Currie explores the representation of abstract states of being and systems of thought, with a focus on social theory, art history and ecology. Her central concern as an artist is bringing invisible things, such as thoughts, emotions, states of being and dreams into the physical world of objects. Currie’s practice utilises intuition, chance and meditative states as origins of form. It foregrounds embodied states that call attention to materiality and the relational to consider the dynamism and vitality of life forces. How do we move through the world? How do we make meaning? She has a particular interest in the history of Modernism and early Post Modernism, the emergence of disciplines such as psychology along-side alternative spirituality and how Modernist artists sought to represent emotional and spiritual states and religious ideas through abstraction. She is based in Adelaide, on the Kaurna lands of South Australia.

Zoe Freney

Image: Linen Mother, 2020, digital print, dimensions variable (Photo courtesy of the artist )

This body of work was conceived as part of my PhD research into depicting the lived experiences of mothering. The structures and images I create focus on the embodied memories of negotiating one's own identity in conjunction with the physical and emotional demands of small dependent others. Even as small children become larger children a mother's body and behaviours are disciplined by societal expectations here imagined as "intimate structures."

Zoe Freney is an artist, writer and educator based in the Adelaide HIlls. She is currently Head of Department (Art History & Theory) at Adelaide Central School of Art. She is a PhD candidate at the School of Art and Design at the Australian National University, Canberra, where her research explores representations of feminist mothers and mothering. Zoe’s work has been shortlisted for several local awards including the Tatiara Art Prize, 2019; RSASA Portrait Prize, 2019; Heysen Art Prize, 2018 and the Fleurieu Art Prize 2018. She has exhibited in group and solo shows in Adelaide, Tennessee (USA), and Edinburgh (Scotland).

Alana Hunt

Image: Mother, 2013, still from video, 38m20s (photo courtesy  of  the  artist)

Mother is a 38 minute video produced over 24 hours of a dog named Babygirl giving birth to 11 puppies. I shot the video in 2013, a few years before I became a mother myself. This video is raw, fierce, painful, vulnerable, dirty and purposeful. It conveys the messy and powerful essence of something so fundamental for our world, full of life and death.

Alana Hunt is an artist and writer who lives on Miriwoong country in the north-west of Australia. This and her long-standing relationship with South Asia—and with Kashmir in particular—shapes her engagement with the violence that results from the fragility of nations and the aspirations and failures of colonial dreams. Alana studied in Sydney, Halifax and New Delhi, and since 2009 she has led several award-winning art and publishing projects. These have circulated in the Hansard Report of the Australian Parliament, as a reading in the history department of Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, as a newspaper serial in Srinagar, Kashmir, and as an unofficial street sign at the base of Australia's most under-utilised dam wall. In late 2020 Alana's decade long body of work Cups of nun chai (2010-ongoing) will be published as a book with New Delhi based Yaarbal Books.

Rochelle Haley

Image: Pitch #1, acrylic, resin, dye and metallic pigment on board, 2018, 60x45cm (photo courtesy of the artist)

'Pitch Forward' is an abstract painting and mural installation exploring the tension between form and movement. The work comprising acrylic paint, dye, metallic pigment and resin is made with a technique of layering translucent and opaque pigments on board, building the illusion of depth into a material thickness. The painting is installed directly on top of a large scale mural that extends the lines and colours of the painting out into the gallery space. The shallow depth of the abstract painting transforms the surface into a dimensional realm, that is able to suggest movement and depth beyond the flat picture plane.

Rochelle Haley’s practice is engaged with painting, drawing and movement to explore relationships between bodies and physical environments. Working with dancers and choreographers, her painting installation and performance works investigate space structured around the sensation of the moving body. Haley is interested in merging compositional strategies of painting and choreography, experimenting with abstraction at the boundaries of disciplines to discover how movement of bodies can be expressed and felt by audiences.

Tania Mason

Image: How it started,   2020, Archival Print on True Rag Etching 300GSM, 24cm x 18.5cm (courtesy of the artist)

Drawing and painting is the basis of my practice. Without it there is no image making. Understanding tone and the rhythms of mark making to create an image is something I work really hard to achieve. The works sit like an inverted version of each other. A process of drawing in one dimension focusing on the delicate spaces of tone. While the other inverted version is a concentrated version of what it looks like to draw in space and in time. I have always thought that animating is about drawing in time. Creating delicate moments where your own marks and tones move and meld on a page. When watching the image it transforms and comes alive! Flora drawings in time, explores neuroscience and flora within the landscape. My aim within these new works is to help the onlooker to stop and see the natural world for what it holds, a diverse and strong environment even when impacted upon just like our synapse and pathways within our wonderful minds! Through a variety of consideration's, I found I could draw on parallels of how neural pathways and nature survives when impacted upon. My aim is to try and connect the wonderful flora that we see daily and showcase how amazingly adaptable it can be sometimes!

Tania is an artist that works with works on paper and canvas. She started her career at the National Arts School and also holds a BFA she has exhibited extensively for Australian Galleries including Art House Gallery and Liverpool Street Gallery and group exhibitions in Paris, Saint Tropez, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Sydney.

In 2016 Tania, was the winner of the Calleen Art Award for Painting and the Cowra Art Award for Painting and a finalist in Fisher Ghost Prize, Robert Jacks Drawing Prize, Banyule City Council and Hazlehurst Regional Art Prize and is regularly invited to Bundanon, Hill End and The Gunnery as an artist in residence many times. Tania has several significant public art commissions including an eighteen metre installation in Bondi Junction, commissioned by Waverley Council. This work was concerned with our colonial development and the story of an introduced species such as the Pine trees within that area. Currently selling limited edition prints through Olsen Gallery.

She has received several significant grants for her work including her development with The Australian Ballet ‘Fire Bird and Other legends’ which were then aquisitioned for The Arts Centre of Victoria Collection and toured regional Australia. Another Australia Council grant allowed her to produce a series of new work in response to our colonial past. Tania Mason’s work has been mentioned and presented in many high profiled magazines, art journals and newspapers including Paris ‘la revanche Des Genres, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Vogue Australia, Vogue Living, and recently an essay ‘Creative Australia and The Ballet Russes’ to name but a few.

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: City Mobilities 2020

City Mobilities was a two-day intensive that explored ideas about the way we access and move in public spaces, supported by City of Adelaide.

Over the two days, participants worked with lead artists Tom Borgas (The Mill resident artist) and Paul Gazzola (OSCA Artistic Director) to explore how they could rethink and reconfigure the city’s infrastructure into other forms and functionalities.

“Learning more about the practice of the facilitators, Paul and Tom, gave us a realistic understanding of what it takes to create a public art project. I enjoyed the exercises and opportunity to share ideas with peers with the knowledge we could work collaboratively in the not-too-distant future. Furthermore, the workshop validated my interest in performance art in public.” 

Photos: Morgan Sette


This program has support from

 
 

the move

The Move: Announcing the 2021 choreographers

The Move is a choreographic commission – a curated initiative of Dance Hub SA, The Mill & Ausdance SA, presented by Adelaide Festival Centre. 

This unique project is the opportunity for choreographers to create works that engage artists and audiences through choreographic process, and to pursue the delivery of choreographic development, seek artistic collaboration, test ambitious ideas in the studio and boldly commit to delivering brave performance works for public presentation. 

Two professional South Australian Choreographers and their artistic teams have been selected to present a double bill of works to be staged at Adelaide Festival Centre’s Space Theatre in April 2021. Artist commissions and additional funding for design elements has been funded by ArtsSA.

Congratulations to commissioned artists:

Gabrielle Nankivell selected by The Mill 

Lewis Major selected by Dance Hub SA 


About the artists:

A woman looks at the camera, she has long red hair and wears a necklace and an orange top.

Gabrielle Nankivell

Wonder Grit

Choreography and Direction: Gabrielle Nankivell in collaboration with Jo Stone

Dramaturgical Support: Katrina Lazaroff

Wonder Grit throws contemporary dance at competitive cycling to investigate the nature of loss, injury and motivation in times of uncertainty. The show is an energetic two-hander packed with killer dancing, survival tips and Adelaide’s most strenuous monologue. Featuring crowd sourced data, a deadly treadly and two women with a tonne of experience, Wonder Grit might just be a ride you won’t want to get off.

Being part of The Move is an opportunity to develop some new collaborative connections while contributing something fun to an artistically diverse new program.” Gabrielle Nankivell

www.gabriellenankivell.com


A man looks at the camera, he is wearing a black t-shirt and is in front of a white background.

Lewis Major

Satori

Choreography and Direction: Lewis Major

Dramaturgy: Amanda Philips

Satori is a Japanese term for awakening. The work explores the states of impermanence and imperfection through an ensemble dance work with 3D projection design and stellar dancers. The interconnecting elements transform into a fluidly shifting atmosphere and stage architecture that continually collide, collapse and create.

“The Move is an incredible, rare opportunity: through this program I have been granted the freedom, space and resource to take a scratch idea, to mould it, shape it and play with it, culminating in a fully-fledged professional performance in the leading South Australian performance venue” Lewis Major

www.lewismajor.com


The Move is a performance platform for new choreographic works; founded through the directors from the allied organisations and the Adelaide Festival Centre.

“South Australian independent dance deserves presentation in our state’s highest calibre venue, the Adelaide Festival Centre. The Move is designed to make this possible for freelance artists to shine a light on our local talent.”
Katrina Lazaroff, The Mill Director

“The Move is one of the most exciting, relevant and significant platforms for freelance Choreographers and the future of Dance. The Move validates and supports creative careers, artistic expression and the development and presentation of new Australian work centred in Choreography as an art form.”
Amanda Philips, Artistic Director Dance Hub SA

“The Move grew out of a need for production opportunities for SA professional dance artists. Performing original work at the Festival Theatre was a significant part of my development as an artist and I’m excited to help develop an opportunity like this again. I’m proud to fulfill Ausdance’s brief to support excellence in all forms and genres of dance.” Cathy Adamek, Director Ausdance SA

Photo credits clockwise from top left: Gabrielle Nankivell supplied by the artist; and Lewis Major by Chris Hertzfeld.

five logos are shown, Adelaide Festival Centre, Dance Hub SA, Ausdance SA, Gov of South Australia and The Mill.

public program, gallery I, gallery II

Exhibition: The Mill Showcase


Photo: Amber Cronin, photographer: Ramsay Photography

October 6 - December 18, 2020

Opening event: Friday, October 30, 5:30pm to 7:30pm

Where: The Mill Showcase, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


The Mill Showcase is a gallery space dedicated to artists who work in our studio spaces at our Angas Street location, exhibiting some of the artworks and products that have been produced under our roof. The Mill Showcase profiles our artists, so that you can put a face to the name and get to know some of our dedicated makers.

This third edition of The Mill Showcase features work by Jennifer Eadie, Amber Cronin and Robyn Wood.

About the artists:

  • Jennifer Eadie is a writer and artist, living and working on Kaurna Yerta in South Australia. She is academic in the Aboriginal Pathway Program at UniSA, a doctoral candidate at Flinders University and a graduate of UNSW Art & Design. Her creative practice is text and installation based; exploring themes such as censorship and connection to place, while her research focuses on ecological rights and approaches to caring for Country.

    This work is a response to the censorship carried out by institutions to justify colonialization. The censor exploits language such as ‘development’ and ‘modernization’ - which characterizes and objectifies Country as a resource / property - as opposed to a sentient living being, of which we are a part.

    Jennifer is The Mill’s Writer in Residence 2019 and current Scotch College Writer in Residence

  • Amber Cronin is an emerging cross-disciplinary artist living and working on Kaurna Land. A recent graduate, her visual arts research is rooted in performative and sculptural gestures that engage the audience through the connection of memory, time and space. Amber is also the co-founder and previous co-director of The Mill Adelaide

    My work is developed through a vocabulary of processes, forms emerge that reframe everyday actions as sites of ritual activity. Utilising elements of ceramics, textiles, performance, moulding and casting, my studio experiments are gathered and displayed in combinations that facilitate meditations on connection and discovery.

    Amber is a Co-Founder and previous Director of The Mill, and continues to work from our studios 

  • Robyn Wood is an Adelaide based designer and maker. Creating furniture, objects and lighting, she works with her clients on custom and small production pieces. Her work is informed by artisan approach, traditional joinery and current manufacturing techniques. She has a Bachelor of Design-Interior Design from the University of South Australia.

    Maintaining a connection to nature is an important theme in my designing. Simple sculptural forms; Lines gently curved; The touch and feel of warmer materials; These are things I am drawn to. I aim to connect the end user to nature and to bring warmth and character into the spaces they inhabit. 

    Robyn has been working at The Mill since 2017