Ah, Mel­bourne, how I love you!

Today was a glor­i­ous Mel­bourne day, sunny and filled with art and light. I love Mel­bourne coffee, a darker roast, smoother on the tongue than double-shot lattes with weaker roasts in over West (every­one over there calls here ‘over East’, so I’m start­ing a reverse trend). The other day I had a sweet drop of it from a small espresso bar on Brun­swick St, today was a divine cup from the Cellar Bar on Bourke St as I indulged in my other vice, devour­ing the Good Week­end from cover to cover.

And I love the Fringe Fest­ival and the beau­ti­ful bamboo sculp­ture in Fed­er­a­tion Square, enorm­ous and intric­ate, with swings and seesaws and rope pulls for kids, threaded with speak­ers play­ing bamboo music, hollow per­cus­sion and gentle tones, while water courses through the pipes and falls from one space to another as the chil­dren play.

And the moment Fringe ends, the Mel­bourne Arts Fest­ival begins. 

Fre­mantle was great and I liked Per­th’s art pre­cinct, but I missed the sten­cil art here, and the street art and the sculp­ture on top of the shops.

I had lunch with Bonnie and we watched the Soyuz launch on the screen in the res­tu­ar­ant (how bizarre: Sky news played the Lord of the Rings theme tri­umphantly as the rocket launched). I’m con­flic­ted about this: $25 mil­lion for a week in space – what a waste! But then again: wow, our first space tour­ist! I wanna go! 

Then we went down to ACMI and I finally got to see White Noise, the exhib­i­tion I was on my way to when I had the scooter acci­dent five weeks ago. It was won­der­ful: they’ve really trans­formed the space. At first glance, it looks like a mirror image reced­ing… and some of the pieces are med­it­at­ive exper­i­ments in light and colour. I found it quite wonderful.

And then to find out that Helen Clark will be form­ing gov­ern­ment in Aotearoa! I’m so pleased. (And I loved watch­ing her and the guy from the Maori party greet­ing each other with a hongi).

A good day. An exhaust­ing day, but a good day.