I had planned to spend more of today marking but I was distracted by yummy people and wonderful things.
Had brunch in town with marius_cale and then we went off to ACMI for the World without End screen gallery exhibition and the State of Play gamelab exhibition that ends on Wednesday.
World without End was mixed, but some beautiful pieces that had us both mesmerised. Favourites included the five screen History of a Day (Simon Carroll & Martin Friedel, timelapse from sunrises to sunsets with storms and wonderful stuff); Train no 1 (Daniel Crooks, incredible sliced film, we spent a while trying to work out how it was done); A Viagem (Christian Boustani, Portuguese animated/live action piece of Japanese screens marking the Portuguese encounter in 1533, absolutely magical, made me tear up) and Too Dark for Night (Clare Langan, Ireland, post-apocalyptic haunting world of sand and light and abandoned houses filling slowly with sand as the wind howls, a voice mutters in what sounds like Elvish – probably Gaelic – and a lone figure walks into the distance). Matt liked hold:vessel 1 (Lynette Wallworth) as well, which I’d seen when the screen gallery first opened but it’s still beautiful, bowls you hold beneath light and feel as though you are holding the projected galaxies, fish, amoebae in your little bowl…
State of Play was a bunch of computer games with an agenda: I finally got to *play* Escape from Woomera rather than just reading about it, and we played a depressing game where we were an Indian girl growing up without many prospects. We tried to choose all the right things to get her to grow up to be president but she ended up an office clerk with a husband and a couple of kids who kept getting arrested by the secret service for being an activist. I do want to go back and play the ones I missed out on – I’d planned to go back but walking Matt back to his bike, we ran into patchworkkid and blithespirit and I ended up joining them and a bunch of others for High Tea at Laurent. Ah well.
Then I went to Shelton Lea’s memorial at Trades Hall (thanks for the reminder, drzero). It was beautiful: lots of amazing poetry by Shelton and by others read by good friends. I didn’t know Shelton well, but I admired and respected him. He was always lovely to talk with and always free with a smile and advice. His poetry is incredible.
i dream of the soft slide of light
i dream of the soft slide of light
across the down of hair on your face,
of the one note samba of your eyes;
of the swelling gentleness of your lips,
and of the you that you commonly call i.
i dream of giant butterflies
winging over sea
and washed rocks gleaming in the sun.
i dream of the dun skies, city spread
and you lying naked on a bed
dreaming,
oh god/ i dream of the seeming wonder of being alive
despite the dreamings of death.
i dream of rose blooming,
of fate never moving from its prescribed path.
i dream of weeds flowering, breathless, in autumn.
— shelton lea
woomera my gulag
woomera my gulag.
your atom bomb skies.
your black winds that shrivelled the grasses
And blackfellers gonads.
frogs croaks’re flattened and dry.
birdsong a weeping for what’s gone.
bleached salt flats fused into glass.
the air heavy with critical mass
and fused with political lies.
and woomera my gulag for immigrant souls
in your shell shocked desert surrounds.
the kadaitcha man floats through the ashes
without ever making a sound.
the stories of place are no longer there.
as quick as a bomb slick
the poles are reversed
from what was to what’s not
and to slough people up in this place of despair
is perverse;
have we gone mad
they’re people like us mr government man.
— shelton lea
It was good to see people there, celebrating his life. It was good to listen and reflect. And someone there told me I was ‘astounding’ and that can’t be bad, can it?