
Events
MPavilion Parkville at the University of Melbourne
Featured events
Lighting the Wilin and National Reconciliation Week morning tea
Each year, we come together for Lighting the Wilin, a beloved annual event which recognises National Reconciliation Week at the University.
We invite all University of Melbourne students, staff, and our broader community to join us for this important event.
On the morning of 30 May, we’ll gather in the Wilin Garden at the Southbank campus to recommit to Reconciliation and to celebrate the vital role of the Wilin Centre.
After Lighting the Wilin, we invite you to join us in the Fiona and Sidney Myer Gallery to enjoy morning tea and the newly opened exhibition, The Ocean Remembers, featuring work by Ali Gumillya Baker and Jody Haines
Please register for this event for accurate numbers for catering.
Banner image: Gregory Lorenzutti
The Ocean Remembers
(Re)membering to Listen, Jody Haines, palawa, (2023) is a single channel projection work, extracted from a larger seven channel work called Against the Wind, featuring a surround soundscape. The work was filmed on Tommeginne Country, Lutruwita (Tasmania), where Haines created a visual love letter to Country. This work follows the ‘slipstreams of songlines’, remembering and relearning, deep listening and breathing.
Sovereign Fleet, (2013), is a series of photo portraits of women by Ali Gumillya Baker. Using the symbolism of 18th and 19th century transport ships, her works refer to colonial archives, memory and inter-generational transmission of knowledge. Her photographs suggest a contemporary retort to the colonial representations of Aboriginal women. For Gumillya Baker, it is through art, performance, and research into the colonial archive that sovereignty is continually demonstrated and asserted.
By focusing on the process of remembering, the exhibition provides the audience with an opportunity to consider the notion of ‘ocean as witness and source’.
This event follows Lighting the Wilin held at the Wilin Garden from 10AM, Friday 30 May. Please join us for morning tea and the opening for The Ocean Remembers.
Exhibition:
30 May - 28 June
12PM - 5PM Tuesday to Saturday
Title: (Re)membering to listen, 2023, Duration: 9.32 mins, Single Channel Video with surround soundscape.
PARKING
The City of Melbourne has recently changed the parking restrictions around the Southbank Campus. Parking control hours are now expanded to 7am–10pm, seven days per week, and are capped at three hours. A $2-per-hour fee after 7pm is also now in place. There is no change to the $4-per-hour peak rate between 7am–7pm. Parking inspectors are regularly in the area fining drivers who overstay their meter, so we encourage everyone to be aware and avoid an expensive fine. More information.
ACCESSIBILITY
All venues at the Southbank campus are wheelchair accessible. To read more about access services available at our venues, please visit: https://finearts-music.unimelb.edu.au/access-our-events.
65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art
65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art reveals the importance and brilliance of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art and knowledge while confronting the brutality of Australia’s colonial history. The exhibition features more than 400 works, including rarely seen Indigenous works of art and cultural objects from the University of Melbourne’s collections.
Curated by Associate Provost and Distinguished Professor Marcia Langton AO, Senior Curator Judith Ryan AM, and Associate Curator Shanysa McConville – in consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and custodians of art traditions – the exhibition explores the belated recognition of Indigenous art and its rise to prominence globally.