Forbes Phoenix

Forbes Artist Features In Hypothetical Festival

‘Spooner Oval: New Harvest – Myee Maze’ by Rosalie Burns. Photo: Cazeil Creative.

What if Forbes’ Spooners Oval was dug up and turned into a garden for bogon moths? That’s one of the provocative idea suggest­ed by Forbes artist Ro Burns.

VISION 20/50 an (im)possible festival is regional arts organisation Arts OutWest’s speculative, hypothetical festival project that positions artists as engineers of an op­timistic future. The ambitious nine-month project will wrap up with a public event in Bathurst on Thursday 12 December 2024.

“We tasked regional artists, across mul­tiple arts disciplines, to imagine an artwork that could only be made in the year 2050, and to imagine the world in which that art­work could exist,” explains project director Adam Deusien.

After a series of public workshops and a call for ideas, the nine selected artists par­ticipated in a residency weekend facilitated by Deusien and All Tomorrow’s Futures art­ist and futurist Ana Tiquia.

Ro Burns’ hypothetical work takes us to a future without contact sport, where Forbes’ Spooner Oval is now a pattern of nectarproducing plants that support a bogong moth colony. Her artwork is an annual cel­ebration of the moth’s mass emergence.

“The work challenges the community to consider the unthinkable – the loss of cul­ture, and cultural icons and the re-evalua­tion of priorities in the face of environmen­tal and social upheaval,” Ms Burns said.

The artists – who normally work across music, painting, conceptual art, photog­raphy, weaving, film and theatre – have pushed into new, hybrid artforms with their invented works.

The launch event will include panel dis­cussions, short films and networking. The nine works will be launched at VISION 20/50 an (im)possible festival on Thursday 12 December, from 5.30pm at Keystone 1889 in Bathurst.

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