Cowra, NSW, Dec 2011

CHALLENGE:
Tallstoreez’ Change Media and Bell Shakespeare Company have collaborated with a selection of artists from recent refugee / asylum seeker backgrounds, and explored the creation of a cutting edge inter-artwork that speaks to the global issues of forced migration.
Located at the Corridor Project near Cowra, this laboratory trained all 18 participants in digital media while developing creative responses to the current refugee debate through Shakespeare and Shakespearean equivalents from other cultures. We explored what unites and divides us in a rapidly changing world. Forced migration means millions of people are displaced to somewhere else. This global phenomenon affects us all. How do we live and share these stories? What is our vision for the future?

It is said Shakespeare speaks to the core of the human condition, but what role does ‘Shakespearience’ play for young refugees far from home, war and their own influential storytellers and cultural heritage? This 3-year project provides a framework for them to create their own stories, engaging with a Shakespearean filter.

Our key aim for this collaboration was to develop a high quality multi-art project in collaboration with Bell and various artists and mentors, most of whom have been refugees, to creatively re-frame the public discussion about refugee issues. It is in our interests that everyone collaborating in the Cowra lab has this as their core aim, and we will do everything possible to establish an inspiring, creative container to explore these ideas.

We are aiming for a deliberate collision of CACD and the ‘high arts’ sectors, facilitated through digital media, CACD and theater professionals, who bring a diverse range of skills and experiences. This exploration included ‘classical’ training [both digital media and theater] and ‘performing emergencies’ to develop a framework for representations of ‘Other’ and cultural difference. We want to create equitable relationships for a non-exploitative, safe yet high-risk creative collaboration. Our process playfully acknowledges our diversity of experiences [whiteness, racism, colonialism, classics vs new art etc] while pushing for fun, excellence and high quality outcomes. Out of the 14 concepts developed, we made 9 films during the 5-day laboratory, which will be available for online viewing soon.
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PARTNERS: Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative; Bell Shakespeare Company – Mind’s Eye; STARTTS NSW; members of the Melbourne Asylum Seeker Resource Centre theater group; Tallstoreez Productionz, the Corridor Project Cowra

IMPACT & FEEDBACK:
We have collated our introductory statements for all 10 works below. In the comment section you can also find a selection of the participants’ feedback and comments from our secure blog site, where the work-in-progress was available for review and comments during the post production stage of the project.

1 – Sir Thomas More: This was our first attempt to explore viral messaging through a Shakespearean lens – a strong piece emerged in a few creative hours…it was fun that each person chose their own location to express their line. Not much has changed on this clip since Cowra, we added some music, let us know what you think.

2 – Behind The Scenes (Yomal’s Movie Moments): We think this is an extraordinary piece that speaks to the heart of the issue: representation… We decided to present the initial pitch up front, to quickly set up the premise, and removed the Scarface reenactments (sorry Paul), as it was too difficult to explain to anyone who wasn’t at Cowra… And some golden rules of editing: remove anything that doesn’t advance the story; and leave any attachments to the footage at the door (but I shot that…) We created a vintage TV template that is possibly too clunky, but kept it in to clearly signpost the different levels of media and representation, that we generally take for granted. We think there is potential for this piece as a short film with a film festival audience. It could also be developed further and included in to the game show performance or mockumentary concepts.

3 – Game Show Mirhat: We dropped the satirical torture underwear advert, it just wasn’t working. Mirhat’s performance of the tortured/torturer was the more profound version in comparison to the underwear ad-spoof. We created this draft format to demonstrate how the game show idea could be integrated with individual performances. We wanted to highlight the dexterity of the performers and dive into the pathos of the issue. We also included some of the feedback session, to present the intentions of the performers, for the benefit of viewers who weren’t at Cowra. The game show clips and performance rehearsals are in-development, we have prepared them to demonstrate the potential for a x-art performance. We think the game show format is a powerful tool to engage audiences playfully with complex issues, and it allows for high drama – and it’s structure allows the artwork to go anywhere… Please remember we filmed the rehearsal without knowing what would be presented, purely for documentation purposes, so when we say these are draft pieces, we want viewers to ignore shaky-cam / edit glitches, they are ideas generators, to be further developed and re-shot etc if the media was to be broadcasted. For us, the 3 game show examples represent one of the strongest ideas we could pursue as a group, with the support of a playwright.

4 – Game Show Elvan: In this piece, we attempted to combine Shakespearean text/ performance (A Winter’s Tale) with Elvan’s story, to create ‘A Woman’s Tale’. The text at the end might be a bit blunt, but we included them as a place holder for messaging if we want to explore that concept further.

5 – Game Show Reyaz: In this piece we explored experimental performance and integration of Shakespearience with text segments from Macbeth, again using the game show as a story device to move us from rehearsal performance to the more elaborate, experimental artwork.

The Perfect Refugee, Minds Eye laboratory

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Click on the link to watch - Sir Thomas More.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch -Cowra Showreel.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch - Yomal’s Movie Moments.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch - Cure Hunters.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch -Labels.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch -The Ad Agency.
If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Our team will also produce new peer-produced training videos, that form part of our A Penny For Your Thoughts initiative with OurCommunity.

Click on the link to watch our current training clips here.

OUTCOMES:
During the first stage of the project, we created a series of viral mock ads, short dramas, comedies and mini-documentaries, by exploring fun/ innovative/ disruptive ways to engage the public in the debate. The short films form part of a performance work that we are developing with all participants and partners, with the aim to develop a major cross-arts performance work by 2013-14 for national presentation.

For the first 5-day creative laboratory at the beautiful Corridor Project art space in Cowra, NSW, December 5-10, we were inviting refugee artists and their supporters from different groups in VIC, SA and NSW, to work with Tallstoreez creative team [theatre, culture jamming, digital media and film making] and Bell Shakespeare team, including 4 Bell players Belinda Hoare, Ivan Donato, Paul Reichstein, Francesca Savige, theater designer Christian Harimanow and artist in residence James Evans.

The selected artists from refugee background for this first laboratory in Cowra were:
Ubah Badi
Alfarid ‘Reyaz’ Musaddique Hussain
Yomal Krishan Rajasinghe
Elvan Alp
Mirhat Turan
Fadia Al Faris
Jiva Parthipan
Samuel Bullen Alier

This laboratory was mentored by Change Media’s creative director Jennifer Lyons-Reid, producer Carl Kuddell, Bell artist in residence James Evans, Melbourne-based community theater director Catherine Simmons and Change Media camera operator Johanis Lyons-Reid.

SCREENINGS & AWARDS: Stay tuned for updates!

IMPACT & FEEDBACK:
We have collated our introductory statements for all 10 works below. In the comment section you can also find a selection of the participants’ feedback and comments from our secure blog site, where the work-in-progress was available for review and comments during the post production stage of the project.

6 – Cure Hunters: It was a Herculean effort to cut this piece down to 10min from its initial 18min Cowra rough cut and maintain its signature laconic pacing. We called it Cure Hunters, [comments please :) ] in keeping with the mockumentary style. We experimented with a ‘quest for knowledge’ soundtrack that is over the top and needs to be toned down and in places dropped altogether, to allow for the observational / fly-on-the-wall feel to come through. As a friendly pat on the back to us all, remember when you watch this that it was produced in a few days, alongside a plethora of other media, as the quality encourages viewers to compare it to big budget, time rich productions. This work could easily stand alone, but we see huge potential for the concept to be developed into a comedy series, either web-based or for TV. The satirical science format would allow us to explore taboos and contentious issues in a very playful yet emotionally charged way, with each episode delving into a new set of murky prejudices, debunking myths about asylum seekers each time, without being preachy or patronising.

7 – The Ad Agency/Viral Pitch Campaign: We included this pitch footage, as the concepts are very strong and we didn’t have enough time at the lab to follow them through. The fishing for refugees installation could work also very well within a x-art / game show performance.

8 – Proud Refugees – Community-made Media: The work stands on its own as it targets a different audience to the other pieces. It is a strong example that demonstrates the potential of self-run media hubs – to raise awareness and produce community messages by, for and about refugee communities and support organisations.

9 – Labels – Awareness raising: This is a strong example of an awareness campaign, and showcases the potential of peer-produced media (focus on clarifying the message and assets available so the final work isn’t limited by low budgets and/or limited time). We shortened the Cowra version to move the story along and keep a fun and fast pace.

10 – The Ad Agency – development: Our process for the Cowra Lab was to create the Ad Agency as a scaffolding to get everyone up to speed with our noisy, distracted collective psyche and to inspire everyone to do the impossible: create snappy messages to spark a public debate, the stuff of great art. It surfaced as the most effective way to explore complex political issues with a group of people who hadn’t met before, who had vastly different skills and agendas. Once we all shared our personal understandings of the issue with a strong drive to be heard, we felt the ‘think tank’ was ready to explore the issue through a Shakespearean lens. Thank you all for playing, it was inspirational to experience the passion, professionalism and thirst for excellence from everyone. We all ended up taking many risks to create in this way. This is a compilation of the clips we produced in a few days during the lead-up to the Cowra lab. We wanted to test drive some of our ideas and make sure that our plans for Cowra were achievable. We are keen to publish them online and see if we can get the viral campaign experiment to work. This would be a plus for community media if we can create some keys to compete in the castle-driven world of media. So please give feedback!

Read the rest of this page and add your comments »

Adelaide ARA, SA, July 9-10 2011

CHALLENGE: Change Media worked with 13 new arrivals and young refugees from Buthan and several African countries as well as Australian Refugee Association staff over 2 days, to continue training in film narratives, interview techniques and digital media skills as part of our 3-year multi-arts project, The Perfect Refugee.

PARTNERS: The Australia Council for the Arts Creative Communities Partnership Initiative; Australian Refugee Association; Buthanese Community Association SA Inc, Bell Shakespeare Company; Victorian College for the Arts Centre for Cultural Partnerships; Tallstoreez Productionz.

How To Laugh In English

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Click on the image above or the link to watch -The Perfect Refugee – experiment 1: How to laugh in English.

If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

The team also created a training video on how to use a professional HDV camera.
Click on the link to watch -Community training with young refugees – Damber demonstrate camera basics on Sony Z1.

If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

The team’s peer-produced training videos form part of our online training tool kit here.

OUTCOMES:
The participants worked on their main project ‘How To Laugh In English’. They used Image Creation techniques they’d learned at the Forum Theatre workshop in May 2011. They continued to work on their own digital storyboards for their individual films. The team also improved their camera work on HDV Sony Z1 cameras and started post production training on Final Cut 7.

SCREENINGS & AWARDS: Stay tuned for updates.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK: Stay tuned for updates.

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Adelaide ARA-2, SA, June 4-5 2011

CHALLENGE: Change Media worked  with 16 new arrivals and young refugees from Buthan and several African countries as well as Australian Refugee Association staff over 2 days, to continue training in film narratives, interview techniques and digital media skills as part of our 3-year multi-arts project The Perfect Refugee.

PARTNERS: The Australia Council for the Arts Creative Communities Partnership Initiative; Arts SA Partnerships for Healthy Communities; Australian Refugee Association; Buthanese Community Association SA Inc, Bell Shakespeare Company; Victorian College for the Arts Centre for Cultural Partnerships; Tallstoreez Productionz.

Training videos: Camera Z1 – Kangimo

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Click on the image above or the link to watch - Community training with young refugees – Kangimo demonstrate camera basics on Z1 HDV.

If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

The team’s peer-produced training videos form part of our online training tool kit here.

OUTCOMES:
During the 2 days, the participants engaged in comedy concepts and developed ideas for several projects.
Each team pitched their ideas as 5-point story plan. They also started creating their own digital storyboards and continued intermediate camera and interview training. Ideas presented included: How to Laugh in English?, Racist Car and Love Story Music Video.

SCREENINGS & AWARDS: Stay tuned for updates.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK: Stay tuned for updates.

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Adelaide ARA, SA, May 14-15 2011

CHALLENGE: Change Media worked with 18 new arrivals and young refugees as well as Australian Refugee Association staff over 2 days, to build on last years training in film narratives, interview techniques and digital media skills and prepare for a 3-year multi-arts project with Bell Shakespeare.

PARTNERS: The Australia Council for the Arts Creative Communities Partnership Initiative; Arts SA Partnerships for Healthy Communities; Australian Refugee Association; Bhutanese Community Association SA Inc, Bell Shakespeare Company; Victorian College for the Arts Centre for Cultural Partnerships; Tallstoreez Productionz

Film: Video training: Camera Basics

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Click on the image above or the link to watch - Community training with young refugees – Sita, Neru and Khagendra demonstrate camera basics.

If your device can’t play the clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

Click on the link to watch - Uploading Demo with Devi.

The team’s peer-produced training videos form part of our online training tool kit here.

OUTCOMES:
This project aims to built on the success of the first workshop with ARA participants in 2010. The training covered basic screen narratives, interview techniques and how to upload your footage to computer.

The youth team also worked on the overall creative concept for the work with us and Bell Shakespeare, in preparation to the upcoming workshop with Shahin Shafaei.

SCREENINGS & AWARDS: Stay tuned for updates.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK: Stay tuned for updates.

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May 2011: Australia Council grants Tallstoreez’ Change Media project triennial Creative Communities Partnerships Initiative funding

Change Media has been successful in Stage 2 of our CCPI funding proposal to the Australia Council for the Arts, to produce new and exciting works as part of our proposed Creative Communities Partnerships Initiative for three years, 2011-2014.

The Australia Council supports us to deliver new programs for marginalized and young people and their communities across Australia over the coming years, alongside our other partners such as the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet – Office for the Arts’ Indigenous Cultural Support Grant, Bell Shakespeare Company, the Australian Refugee Association; the Ngarrindjeri Land & Progress Association, OurCommunity and all our other partners.

Thanks to all our supporters for all your fantastic work over the last years – we are looking forward to establishing Change Media as a leading initiative for disruptive innovation in the CACD sector nationally and to continue the incredible success we had over the last 7 years in South Australia.

Australian Refugee Association, March 2010

CHALLENGE: Change Media worked with 15 new arrivals and young refugees as well as ARA / Pt. Adelaide Council staff over 4 days, to train them in film narratives, interview techniques and digital media skills. They created a peer-produced, fun documentary DVD about their lives and the challenges of coming to Australia: Culture Shock! Order your copy in our online store here.
PARTNERS: Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative; Arts SA Partnerships for Healthy Communities; City of Port Adelaide Enfield; Australian Refugee Association; Tallstoreez Productionz; Apple Australia

Film: Culture Shock

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If your device can’t play this clip, click here to watch it on Vimeo.

OUTCOMES: The training covered an introduction to screen narratives, file management and interview & reenactment techniques, documentary shooting and Final Cut editing skills. After an involved debate about the many issues faced by young refugees, the team (comprising of 15 young people from Kongo, Sudan, Bhutan, Belarus, Tanzania and Burundi) decided to use a mix of fun and serious examples of situations they were faced with as new arrivals. The team also created the original soundtrack in Garageband and recorded most of the behind-the-scenes documentations.

See also participant interviews: Interview – AJ, Interview – Bikram, Interview – Bunam, Interview – Chris, Interview – Damber, Interview – Graick, Interview – Devi Interview – Kangimo, Interview – Peter, Interview – Maxim, Interview – Priyanka.

SCREENINGS & AWARDS: Please watch this space for updates. The final film screened at ARA in April 2010 to huge applause. Several local councils and NGO’s have acquired copies of the DVD for their work with young refugees. Please order a copy of Culture Shock here. The project was one of the main reasons why Change Media was selected as winner of the Kookaburra Awards 2010 for Best Community Project.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK: The team managed to create engaging stories that raise awareness about issues faced by young refugees living in the Port Adelaide Enfield district and wider Adelaide area. The participants hadn’t worked as a team were able to produce one film together; everybody conducted several shoots, interviews and took part in the edit and music production. By the end of Day 4 the team finished a rough cut of a funny and engaging documentary about appropriate / inappropriate behaviors and other challenges. The whole team agreed on the changes they wanted for the fine cut, for the Change Media team to clean up the edit, add title cards and insert the participants self-made music. We have already been approached by ARA to conduct another project soon, as the participants are keen to build on their new skills. Read the rest of this page and add your comments »

DECS Multicultural Unit Adelaide, July 2007

CHALLENGE: The Hero Project team worked with 20 students and several teachers to produce a multi-cultural awareness video for the Department of Education Multicultural Unit.

PARTNERS: Department of Education and Children Services SA; Apple Australia; Tallstoreez Productionz

Film: Mission Possible

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OUTCOMES: The Hero Project worked with 20 students from Gilles St Primary School, Adelaide, to record positive example and activities around multi-cultural educational practice.

The participating teachers from several Adelaide schools received professional development training to use digital media in the classroom. The team included Helen Grant [Gilles St PS], Shona Russo [LeFevrre HS] and Andy Mewett [Glenunga HS].

SCREENINGS & AWARDS
The film screened as part of the Come Out 2007 Youth Film Fest at the Mercury Cinema in Adelaide.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK: DECS SA used the film to promote their multicultural unit across Government schools in South Australia. The film was officially launched by Minister for Education Hon jane Lomax-Smith at the Glenunga International High School alongside a new multicultural manual.
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