Events
MPavilion Parkville at the University of Melbourne
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Featured events
Explore the intersection of idealised architectural renderings and the harsh realities of Australia’s housing crisis with Scotty So’s installation Sunset Boulevard Behind The Window.
Drop by MPavilion Parkville to view the work onsite from Tuesday 7 to Thursday 9 May.
Through a nuanced interplay of rendered images, the artwork navigates the utopian allure of luxurious living spaces and flourishing communities within the context of contemporary housing challenges. The double-sided banner presents an AI-generated image of a modern interior, using AI expanding solely from the iconic Windows XP desktop wallpaper on one side, juxtaposed with an architecturally rendered beach sunset view on the other – symbolising the profound dichotomy inherent in housing ideals. Attached to temporary fencing, reminiscent of those employed in housing development concealment, the piece prompts viewers to question the longevity of aspirational imagery when confronted with the deconstruction of facades.
Jim Carlton Integrity Lecture 2024
‘The Urgency of Ethical Challenges Facing the World’
Presented by Professor Raimond Gaita
Introduction by The Hon. Barry Jones AC:
Raimond Gaita (1946- ) is an outstanding, but controversial, moral philosopher who agonises over the state of the world. Born in Germany, son of Romulus Gaita, a Romanian metal worker, and Christine Dorr, a German teacher, his family migrated to Australia in 1950, and he grew up in central Victoria. Educated in Ballarat and Melbourne, he held chairs in moral philosophy at the Australian Catholic University and King’s College, London. His memoir Romulus, My Father (1998) won many awards and became an internationally admired film in 2007. Justice and Hope (2023) is an important collection of his writings.
An English philosopher wrote of him:
“Those who are already familiar with Raimond Gaita’s work will not easily forget the seriousness with which he confronts his readers with stark examples of evil, and then with luminous examples of love and goodness – a confrontation that both elicits and challenges the real responses that give expression to our moral thinking, and a seriousness that exposes the shallowness of much moral theory and its remoteness from lived experience”
Professor Gaita: The most important moral challenges facing humanity, I believe, are the climate crisis, war in which nuclear weapons may be used, and the increasing fragility of democratic forms of government. I wrote the following in the preface to Justice and Hope:
“We have now far more reason to fear for the world than we had when I expressed that fear almost twenty years ago in an essay “Justice and Hope”. That is why I have dedicated the book that carries the name of that essay to my grandchildren, which, implicitly, is to all young people”
Within the book, I wrote:
“More and more, I fear, knowledge of affliction and cruelty will test their understanding of what it means to share a common humanity with all the peoples of the earth, and to a degree almost too awful to imagine, their faith that the world is a good world despite the suffering and the evil in it. What can sustain that faith? I believe there are few questions more urgently in need of sober realism in their formulation and in the answers offered to them”
Those questions continue to haunt me. The epigraph of Justice and Hope (2023) is a quote from Albert Camus: “I chose justice to remain faithful to the world.”
In this lecture, I will try to explain why of the many forms of justice, this is the deepest.
Melbourne Law School (MLS) and Accountability Round Table (ART) hope you can join us for this special lecture with Prof. Raimond Gaita.
ART is a non-partisan group of citizens with diverse backgrounds (journalists, lawyers, academics, former politicians, and judges) and extensive experience in parliament, government, and the courts. It is dedicated to improving standards of accountability, transparency, ethical behaviour, and democratic practice in government across Australia.