Brisbane art initiative to bring support to people living with dementia


As a bachelor qualified art teacher, Natalie Lynch of Studio Yellow in Manly West has spent most of her professional life helping children and teenagers express their ideas and opinions visually.

After her husband of 22-years lost his battle with depression, she decided to shift career paths and start a business that catered to adults searching for creative ways to improve their own outlook on life.

Now in its third year, Studio Yellow has recently been awarded $11,000 as part of the Brisbane City Council’s ‘Creative Sparks Grants Program’.

Targeting locals of Wynnum and Manly, the grant will support the development and implementation of Natalie’s unique pilot program called A.D.A.P.T. (A Dementia Art Program for Today).  

Set in a relaxed environment, Natalie will use her knowledge as a teacher and art therapist to help people living with dementia learn to visualise, plan, communicate, design, create and reflect by utilising drawing and mixed media materials.

Over 15 weeks, up to 60 participants will have the opportunity to learn new art skills so they can express their feelings and emotions visually, providing meaning and purpose for people living with dementia. 

“People with dementia need to focus on enjoying life now. The pilot program will give participants and their carers the opportunity to come to terms with their diagnosis by learning to process their feelings in a way they may have never tried before,” says Natalie.

As part of the program, participants will be given mentoring and exhibition opportunities to help them positively navigate their future after diagnosis.

The A.D.A.P.T. program’s culminating exhibition hopes to raise awareness within the community about dementia.

“The exhibition will be a celebration of what participants can do, rather than what they can no longer do,” says Natalie.

Extensive research strongly evidences that creative expression plays an integral part in enhancing the well-being of people living with dementia by giving a sense of accomplishment and purpose.

Studio Yellow’s A.D.A.P.T. program is set to commence in early 2020. If successful, the program will be rolled out to other precincts within Brisbane.

To learn more about Studio Yellow and the A.D.A.P.T. pilot program, visit https://www.studioyellow.com.au.

Zac Brown Band gets on board to help ‘Furry Friends’


Three time Grammy award winning band, Zac Brown Band have partnered with Best Friends Animal Society to help animals in need following Hurricane Dorian last month.

The recently released music video for the bands hit, ‘Leaving Love Behind, will make you laugh and cry with the compilation of furry friends, showing how pets can make you smile even in the difficult times.

“Whether it’s funny things they do or the fact that they comfort us when we need them, we wanted to highlight how pets can make us smile even when we think we can’t,” the band’s front man Zac Brown said.

Having sold more than 30 million singles and 9 million albums, the track is off their sixth studio album, ‘The Owl’, and is the band’s most personal to date. Currently available for preorder, it is set to be released on September 20th and will be available on CD, vinyl and across all streaming platforms.

To watch the video for ‘Leaving Love Behind’, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rb4WA_fUtY0.

For more information and to donate visit http://bit.ly/ZBBDorianHelp.

John Butler heads home for jam-packed national tour


Australia’s highest selling independent artist, John Butler, is coming home following the success of his seventh studio album, ‘Home’, which was released on September 28th.

His latest album which debuted at number 1 on the Aria charts entered into new territory for the Western Australian with the experimentation of different genres while still remaining true to the John Butler sound that over 1.8 million Australians have come to know and love.

Following the success of his most recent studio album, Butler embarked on a 15 date ‘Coming Home’ tour featuring Missy Higgins and Stella Donnelly to sellout crowds at outdoor arenas around the country, including 2 sold out performances at Sydney’s iconic Opera House Forecourt.


Source: johnbutlertrio.com


Butler will embark on a handful of festival appearances this November and December before returning to the Mainstage at Bluesfest in April to wrap up his biggest year on record. This saw him perform in festivals across the UK, Belgium, Netherlands, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy and North America while also releasing his own podcast series.

For details on his upcoming tour and to purchase tickets, head to the links below.

Bendigo Blues & Roots Festival
Friday 8 November – Ullumbarra Theatre, Bendigo, VIC
Tickets

Handpicked Festival
Saturday 9 November – Langhorne Creek, SA

With Amy Shark, Missy Higgins, The Teskey Brothers & More
www.handpickedfestival.com

Airlie Beach Festival of Music
Sunday 10 November – Airlie Beach, QLD
www.airliebeachfestivalofmusic.com.au

Sydney Coliseum Theatre
Friday 20 December – Sydney, NSW
Tickets

Bluesfest 2020
Sunday 12 April – Byron Bay, NSW
With Crowded House, Dave Matthews Band, Patti Smith & more
www.bluesfest.com.au

Didirri returns with his most captivating tune yet, ‘Blue Mood Rising’


After recording with renowned producer Dann Hume (Amy Shark, Matt Corby, Tash Sultana, Troye Sivan), Didirri returns with one of his most captivating and moving tunes yet – Blue Mood Rising‘.

Holding true to his mission to make music for ‘Lovers & Overthinkers’Didirri’s latest song-writing echoes charm and raw power. Not only is it captivating, but it magnifies important issues and motivates crowds to feel, move, think and heal.

After releasing his debut EP “Measurements”Didirri has been inundated with success and support from all angles. From a collective 30 million streams, to playing Splendour In The Grass, to having 4x singles added to triple j rotation, and holding a US and UK tour, Didirri has exploded globally.

The achievements are impressive and humbling, and ultimately highlight
the universal language of music and its power to resonate with any audience.

His lyrics are set apart from the average singer-songwriter and usher you into his mind, ultimately connecting you with his inner psyche. It’s modern music with a classic twist.

“I have always been wary of being led down the garden path. However, it is a beautiful path to tread. It is a colourful and engaging life to lead but only when walked by you. Have you ever looked at a photo of yourself and thought that you were different back then? Has your confidence changed? Are you easily shaken now? But, how can your feet be swept away if you have them firmly on the ground by your own decision?,” says Didirri.

“Blue Mood Rising” is a thunderstorm of deep lyrics, lush guitar tones, elevating percussion and smooth backing vocals. As the tune plays, you can’t help but self-reflect and become immersed in the dynamics and uniqueness that is Didirri.

“Remember who you do this for. Whatever ‘this’ is. There will be others that help you down the path but remember where your core is. Your self-worth should be based on your own choices. If there is ever a crack to appear in your footing, you’ll feel it.

You’ll feel a blue mood rising before it appears.” – Didirri

Written by Didirri Peters and George Taylor, and produced by Dann Hume and Hayden Calnin“Blue Mood Rising” is now available on all digital platforms!

Didirri will be playing The Riverstage in Brisbane with City & Colour for Bris Fest later this month before This That Festival in Newcastle November 9th, headlining Loch Hart Music Festival in Princetown November 15th-17th, as well as joining Middle Kids on their national album tour!




September 28th – Riverstage – Brisbane, QLD (w/ City & Colour)

November 7th – Astor Theatre – Perth, WA (w/ Middle Kids)


November 9th – This That Festival – Newcastle, NSW


November 14th – Enmore Theatre – Sydney, NSW (w/ Middle Kids)


November 15th-17th – Loch Hart Music Festival – Princetown, VIC


November 17th – The Forum – Melbourne, VIC (w/ Middle Kids)


November 21st – The Tivoli – Brisbane, QLD (w/ Middle Kids)

Rumours unveil brand new release ‘Incredulous’ alongside nation-wide tour


Since the release of their electrifying new-year release, “Paralyse”, Melbourne-based rockers Rumours have been knuckling down in the studio working on a new style of music. This new style comes in the form of “Incredulous” – a fast-paced alternative-rock tune reminiscent of early Linkin Park.

“Incredulous” was released on September 13th and with the release came the announcement of a headline tour which will begin this Thursday 19th, September, that will take the single to audiences in Newcastle, Sydney, Canberra, and Melbourne.

“Incredulous” builds on the hype that “Paralysed” earned Rumours, with over 138,000 streams on Spotify since March, plays on Triple J’s Home & Hosed and Short. Fast. Loud. and rotation on Triple J Unearthed radio.

Produced, mixed, and mastered by Chris Lalic, “Incredulous” begins with a deep sound before delving into its traditional grungy edge. Before too long, the tune soars into a unique chorus full of heavy sonic elements and dynamic vocals.

Vocalist Jackson Bentley explains that “the song is basically about if you were to find yourself in another world surrounded by alien life, or a different form of living being, how many people would still disbelieve in what stood before them?”

The single comes complete with a music video, produced and directed by videographer, Colin Jeffs (WindwakerDealerThe BraveThe Beautiful Monument). The video’s chaotic bursts of colour and dark components compliment the band’s edgy and unique timbre, producing a visual that is both creative and synonymous with the band’s identity.

Bentley says that the band wanted the film clip to be captivating, so in turn, the video became “a celebration of music, dance, abstract art, makeup and colour. And it all combines into this 4-minute film, for what I think is the coolest video we have made!

In celebration of the release of “Incredulous”, Rumours will head out on a headline tour with Sydney’s Inertia to play Newcastle’s Hamilton Station Hotel on Thursday September 19 alongside PSTCRDS and Everleigh, Sydney’s Oxford Art Gallery on Friday September 20 with Artisan and Kaskeid, Canberra’s The Basement on Saturday September 21 with Hostel and Strones Throw and finally Melbourne’s Workers Club with To OctaviaVatic and Days Like These.

“Incredulous” is out now on all digital platforms and streaming outlets. 
Tickets for the “Incredulous” tour can be purchased from https://linktr.ee/rumours_au!

Rebecca Lewis brings Little Queensland Histories to life in her first solo exhibition


Remember Rebecca Lewis? She merges creativity and community in her playful and inventive art projects, which are made exclusively from second-hand and recycled materials. 

When we last chatted, she was preparing her first solo exhibition, an endeavour both terrifying and electrifying. After months of research, preparation and creative frenzy, Little Histories is ready to go and will run until the 14th of September! Head to the Project Gallery at QCA (Southbank) for a taste of what this highly talented and imaginative artist has to offer. 

Little Histories is an exploration of the local, daily and real lives of five Queensland families. The show documents those tales that are passed down through generations and which are part and parcel of the very fabric of the land, although they mostly go untold, and forgotten. 

Weaving together the small threads of little family histories, Rebecca is giving them their place in the broader tapestry of South East Queensland and its rich past. What she found through her interviews was a community with strong links to each other and to the land. 

She has genuinely enjoyed the whole creative process. “The best thing that’s come out of it has been finding even more connections between the families I featured in the work, which speaks to me so much about community and our links to where we live.”

The idea for Little Histories was actually born over twenty years ago. Rebecca interviewed her great-grandmother for a school project and discovered whole episodes of family history that she had previously been entirely unaware of. 

One such event was the murder of her great-grandmother’s sister. Upon mentioning her great-grandmother’s story to a friend who happened to work in the QLD State Archives, Rebecca actually found a write-up of the 1927 event! The archives also held the watercolour map depicting investigative details like the location of the revolver, and news clippings from the time of the murder – the perfect example of how ‘little’ histories affect and shape whole communities. 

Today’s exhibition is the culmination of interviews with friends and their relatives. Rebecca worked with them throughout the creative process to produce visual, tangible and multi-dimensional representations of their collective memories.

Featuring a technique called locative collage, Little Histories is a juxtaposition of genuine family photos and miniature lino-print replicas of their homes, photographed together outdoors. The effect is both nostalgic and joyful, pulling you into the fragmented details that together make up a community’s history. 

Each image is accompanied by a story narrated by a family member, immersing you into the tiny joys, the little tears, the trivial things that make us all human. The audio is available at www.thelittlebrowndogworkshop.com/little-histories with a thumbnail of each image. 

In line with Rebecca’s environmental ethos, the prints are created using local and reclaimed materials. Rebecca’s friends have all been on a lookout mission for months, keeping their eyes open for frames in op-shops and vintage stores! 

Check out Rebecca’s Instagram page for sneak peeks of the show (https://www.instagram.com/littlebrowndog/) then take yourself down to Southbank to see Queensland, community and history in a whole new light!

Saving Bimblebox: how art can change mindsets


Queensland is a treasure trove of highly varied landscapes, ecosystems and parks. From rainforests to eucalyptus groves, grasslands to tidelands and everything in between, our surroundings are magical, vibrant and vital.

What better way to celebrate Queensland’s natural magic than through art? Visual, musical, and spoken creativity is uniquely poised to capture the emotions and mystery woven into the fabric of nature.

This bond is powerfully expressed at the Bimblebox Nature Refuge. The Bimblebox Art Project, run by Jill Sampson, engages with the diversity of life in the sanctuary as well as issues of conservation and exploitation that are plaguing this beautiful ecological hotspot.

The Bimblebox Nature Refuge is an 8, 000-hectare sanctuary nestled in central-west Queensland. One of the few remaining intact remnant habitats, the Bimblebox refuge has never been cleared and is of extraordinarily high conservation value to ecologists state-wide.

This semi-arid deserts uplands refuge is home to a wide diversity of ecosystems, providing welcome and necessary shelter to myriad indigenous flora and fauna. Over 158 bird species call Bimblebox home, including twelve which are of high conservational significance. There are also a wide variety of reptile and animal species which thrive here.

Bimblebox further doubles as a sustainable cattle property, where on-going research is taking place in nature ecology and sustainable grazing practices. The aim is to marry production with biodiversity conservation.

Despite having a Nature Refuge Agreement with the QLD State Government, Bimblebox and other nature refuges are not protected from coal mining.

In fact, the Bimblebox Nature Refuge is under threat, as of 2007, from a massive coal-mining operation proposed for the Galilee Basin. The projected plan suggests open-cut mining more than half of the reserve, and underground mining the rest. This would increase the state’s coal production by 150%, and Australia’s emissions by 130%. The coal produced will be sent to China to be used in energy and power generation.

The effect of this on Bimblebox‘s groundwater reserves, agriculture and ecosystems, not to mention on Australia’s efforts to apparently reduce their emissions, will be profound. If Bimblebox survives, it will be one of the only remaining long-term research sites into ecology and biodiversity conservation. If it does not, the priorities of the QLD State Government will have been made clear.

Luckily, Bimblebox and the conservation efforts taking place there are not without supporters. In 2012, artist Jill Sampson launched the Bimblebox Art Project, which aims to creatively engage with and document the refuge’s ecosystems and habitats.

The initiative gathered artists at the refuge every September. Together, they would explore the threatened ecology of the sanctuary and comment on biodiversity loss, food security, water use and climate change from within their own creative practices.

The Bimblebox Art Project is hitting Brisbane this September with their Bimblebox 153 Birds exhibition, which has been touring since 2015. Head to the Queensland College of Art from the 3rd to the 14th of September to be blown away by the spoken word, music and art which celebrate the multiplicity and significance of the bird species which inhabit the sanctuary. This year, the exhibition includes work by Aussie music and art legend, Reg Mombassa.

Over 450 writers, musicians and artists worldwide have creatively given voice to the 158 bird species of Bimblebox. Beautiful artist prints and soundscapes, composed of poetry, prose and musician’s bird calls, come together to create a dynamic and poignant installation.

The idea came about when Jill received interest in the Bimblebox Art Project from artists who couldn’t make it to the remote location. To find ways of involving them and their work in an exhibition which needed to be compact and transportable, Jill explored multi-disciplinary and multimedia options.

Birds are one of the critical ways humans interact with the Wild, be it by sight or sound. As such, they make a highly relatable symbol for Bimblebox, one which feels real, tangible and provocative. They also depend on the soil and its own ecosystems for sustenance, accordingly symbolising the symbiotic nature of the Bimblebox ecology.

The first call-out went out in 2013, and the first exhibition took place in 2015. The project has been on-going since then, with over seven new species having been discovered and added in the meantime.

Reg Mombassa, who has been a successful and beloved musician and artist since 1976, made his own contribution to 153 Birds. His iconic Mambo style art and beautiful re-imagining of a musical bird call have joined the effort the save Bimblebox. He encourages people to come to the exhibition and engage with the issues which it raises, hoping that collective awareness can help to bring about change.

See you there!

For more information, visit their website.

Image Credit:  Rew Hanks, The Coal Throated Finch, 2014, Hand Coloured Linocut, photo courtesy of the artist.