7-10 Symposium

7-10 Symposium

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FRIDAY 13 MAY 2022
Transitions: supporting moments in time

 Art Education Victoria is proud to present our inaugural 7-10 Symposium with our theme being
Transitions: supporting moments in time.

Join us as we explore topics related to Transitions for students and art educators teaching years 7-10 visual art. We will share ideas, experiences and bring teachers together to support teacher professional learning. In partnership with Monash University Fine Art, this event will take place at the Caulfield campus the home of MUMA.

Our program will include keynote speakers Peta Clancy and Nicholas Mangan, breakout sessions including a behind the scenes exhibition tour of Collective Movements at MUMA with Director Charlotte Day and an Art History talk with Luke Smythe, hands-on workshops, art educator panels and opportunities to network and connect with peers.

Educator led panel topics related to our theme of Transitions will include:
- How do we support student choices and motivations to take up visual art in VCE?
- How do we address the issues that come up when students have gap years and do not study Visual Arts within the 7-10 year levels?
- What strategies do teachers implement to support Year 7 students with a diverse range of primary school art experiences, skills and knowledge?

Program & Presenters

  
 

 

 

Peta ClancyPeta Clancy

Peta Clancy artwork

 

Artist presenters with Q&A together
Peta Clancy & Nicholas Mangan

Peta Clancy and Nicholas Mangan will talk about their work in short presentations and together a Q&A will follow. Each artist will address their specific research areas which encompass themes including hidden histories of colonisation and climate change. Through introducing their individual practices, the talks will also consider their own teaching approaches in the studio, and ways in which their work may be referenced in the classroom.
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Peta Clancy is a descendent of the Bangerang nation from the Murray Goulburn area, South Eastern Australia. She has been awarded the 2018 Fostering Koorie Art and Culture and the Koorie Heritage Trust Residency Grant.

Clancy’s has had numerous solo exhibitions including, Linden New Art (2015); Galerija Kapelica, Slovenia (2013); Performance Space, Sydney (2011); Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney (2007); Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, UK (2005). Selected group exhibitions have included Under the Sun: Reimagining Max Dupain’s Sunbaker, State Library of New South Wales and Monash Gallery of Art (2017); TEA Super Connect, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts (2013) and National Centre for Contemporary Arts (Baltic Branch), Russia (2013).

In 2017 Clancy acted as a curatorial advisor for Science Gallery Melbourne’s season Blood. In 2009-2013 she collaborated with Helen Pynor on ‘The Body is a Big Place’ project, exploring organ transplantation, working with members of that community, medical clinicians, and scientists. The project won an Honorary Mention in the 2012 Prix Ars Electronica, Austria.

Image credit: Peta Clancy, Cutting Edge 2015-16

Nicholas ManganNicholas Mangan

Nicholas Mangan artwork

 

 

 

Nicholas Mangan's practice is driven by the desire to make sense of the world by unpacking histories and possible narratives that surround specific contested sites and objects. This investigation explores the unstable relationship between culture and nature, evidencing the flows of matter, energy and ideologies that are produced through the tension of these two realms. A tropical mine in a conflicted state whose local inhabitants used coconuts as fuel in their resistance, a strip-mined island-nation in bankruptcy that took refugees in return for payment from the Australian government, the island of stone money that exemplified money as a social technology, and a geological sample of the earth’s oldest crust have each lent material to this process of dissection and reconfiguration. By rerouting each of these stories, new forms and latent narratives are unearthed.

Solo exhibitions include Termite Economies Sutton Gallery, Melbourne, Australia (2018), Limits to Growth at Kunst Werke Berlin (2017),  IMA Brisbane and MUMA Melbourne (2016), Other Currents, Artspace Sydney (2015), Ancient Lights, Chisenhale Gallery, London (2015). Group exhibitions include, 74 million million million tons Sculpture Centre, Long Island City, New York, USA (2018), Manipulate the World, Mordern Museet Stockholm, Sweden (2017), Let's Talk About the Weather: Art and Ecology in a Time of Crisis, Sursock, Beirut 2016. Mangan has been awarded numerous international residencies, including Recollets Artist Residency, Paris, in 2011 and the Australia Council's New York Green Street Residency in 2006. In 2007 he was a recipient of the Anne and Gordon Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarship, resulting in postgraduate studies at Universität der Künste in Berlin, Germany.

Image credit: Nicholas Mangan, Core-coralations 2021, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne. Courtesy the artist and Sutton Gallery, Melbourne. Photograph: Andrew Curtis

  
 

Charlotte DayCharlotte Day

Collective Movements identity by Jenna Lee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MUMA Collective Movements Exhibition Tour 

Join Charlotte Day, the Director of MUMA who will deiver a behind-the-scenes tour of the exhibition Collective Movements. You will be given insights into the show and have the opportunity to ask questions about the exhibition and MUMA. Charlotte will also share information on the art-led education programs run by MUMA.
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Collective Movements is a wide-ranging project focusing on the work of historic and contemporary First Nations creative practitioners and community groups that recognises collectivity as integral to Indigenous knowledges and ways of being. Contributors include: Ensemble Dutala, Kaiela Arts, this mob (led by Moorina Bonini and Mitch Mahoney), Pitcha Makin Fellas, Koorroyarr Arts, the Possum Skin Cloak Story (founded by Debra Couzens, Vicki Couzens, Lee Darroch and Treahna Hamm), and Uncle Ray Thomas and The Torch, among others.

An exhibition, publishing project, conversation and workshop platform, the project begins from a desire to make more visible a language and terminology beyond Western art concepts of ‘collaboration’ and ‘collectivism’— one that better describes and acknowledges the way Indigenous creatives work within a broader community and its inheritances. Curators: Kate ten Buuren, Maya Hodge and N’arweet Dr Carolyn Briggs AM.

 Charlotte Day has been MUMA’s Director since 2013. She has extensive curatorial and arts management experience having worked in contemporary art organisations including the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA), Centre for Contemporary Photography (CCP) and Gertrude Contemporary and as guest curator for the The Anne Landa Award (2013), Adelaide Biennial (2010), TarraWarra Biennial (2008) and Australian Pavilion for Venice Biennale (2005 and 2007). Charlotte has worked across a range of public and private contexts, both in shaping collections as well as managing public art projects, including for Kaldor Public Art Projects and the Michael Buxton Collection. Charlotte has a Master of Arts in Museums and Material Culture from Monash University (1995).

GIF image credit: Collective Movements Identity: Jenna Lee

   
Luke SmytheLuke Smythe

Installation view at Pinakothek der Moderne. Photographer: Haydar Koyupinar.

Art History presentation
Luke Smythe will discuss his approach to teaching students about the key developments in the recent histories of art, design and architecture. Learning about each of these histories and the social developments they relate to, give students a clearer understanding of what it means to work in creative practice and why it is that creativity is so important to our lives.
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Luke Smythe is a lecturer in art history and theory at Monash University. Luke has taught art history in New Zealand and the United States. From 2012–2014, he worked as a Curatorial Fellow in Postwar Art at the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich. His recent research has focused on three main topics: the global evolution of modernism since the Second World War, abstract cinema and somatic experience, and the passage of analogue art media into the digital era. Articles and essays, addressing these and other topics, have appeared in a number of publications, including October, Modernism/modernity, the Art Journal (U.S.), and Oxford Art Journal. His book Gretchen Albrecht: Between Gesture and Geometry was published in 2019 by Massey University Press.

Image credit: I am a Sender. I Transmit! The Multiples of Joseph Beuys, 2014. Installation view at Pinakothek der Moderne. Photographer: Haydar Koyupinar. Investigators: Luke Smythe, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich Maja Wismer, The Busch-Reisinger Museum/Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 

   Art Educator led panel discussions
E

Educator led panels 
Topics related to the theme: Transitions: supporting moments in time

  • How do we support student choices and motivations to take up visual art in VCE?
  • How do we address the issues that come up when students have gap years and do not study Visual Arts within the 7-10 year levels?
  • What strategies do teachers implement to support Year 7 students with a diverse range of primary school art experiences, skills and knowledge?

 

 
 

Monash University Art Studio workshops

Drawing at Monash      Printmaking Studio
Expanding Drawing/Sculpture
This workshop considers contemporary modes of drawing such as observational drawing, architectural projection, collaboration, and working in the expanded field. With an emphasis on colour, simplification and composition, the project will create connections between each other’s work in a collaborative manner to link drawing practice with three dimensional outcomes. Teaching Associates from the Monash Fine Art Programme will lead this workshop.

Printmaking
In this printmaking workshop, Jonas Ropponen will present a demonstration of technical skills that will greatly help improve the quality of your students' work and your confidence with printmaking techniques. The Monash University printmaking workshop is a large professional best-practice printmaker's workshop and is fully equipped to cater for any printmaking method.

  • Topics include:
  • how to best make a woodblock, linoblock, relief collagraph
  • what tools and materials are the best to use, and how to adapt with what you have
  • how to roll up the right consistency of ink for printing
  • how to set the printmaking press pressure for optimum printing
  • how to manage mess and ink waste
  • OH&S in a printmaking studio
   


Join us on Friday 13 May 2022 as we engage in conversations and share ideas to support art educators to enrich student learning. To register and book your ticket CLICK HERE.

Tickets 

Payment Terms

  • Please note all personal payments must be made up front with a credit card at the time of booking.
  • Purchase orders are accepted from schools/organisations paying for teacher/employee professional development. Please ensure payments are received prior to this event.
  • Please note all in-person tickets include catering for lunch, morning and afternoon tea.

 

$299 - General Admission/ Non- Member

You are welcome to first join as an ArtEdVic Member to receive the discounted Member ticket price and enjoy the benefits of membership and being part of our community beyond the conference. Visit this link now to join ArtEdVic 

$225 - ArtEdVic Member

Please ensure your AEV Membership is current by logging in to your account online or please feel welcome to email us at hello@aev.vic.edu.au. If your membership is not valid, we will ask you to renew before the conference.

$269 - Concession /Non- Member

Only for - Pre-Service Teacher/Tertiary Student/CRT/Regional
Proof of concession or CRT status verification will be required for purchase and on the day. (Tertiary Student ID etc.)

$199 - Concession /ArtEdVic Member

Only for - Pre-Service Teacher/Tertiary Student/CRT/Regional
Proof of concession or CRT status verification will be required for purchase and on the day. (Tertiary Student ID etc.)

Please ensure your AEV Membership is current by logging in to your account online or please feel welcome to email us at hello@aev.vic.edu.au. If your membership is not valid, we will ask you to renew before the conference.

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Venue

Monash University Caulfield Campus
900 Dandenong Road
Caulfield East Victoria 3145

WHAT ELSE DO YOU NEED TO KNOW?

 

Public Transport
Visit the Public Transport Victoria website for more information and connecting services in your area.
Train: Frankston, Pakenham or Cranbourne lines (Caulfield Station stop)
Tram: Number 3 (Caulfield Station stop)
Bus: Routes 624 and 900 (Caulfield Station stop)

On-campus parking is available for visitors. 

Payment Terms
Please note all personal payments must be made up front with a credit card at the time of booking. Purchase orders are accepted from schools/employers paying for teacher/employee professional development. Purchase Order payments must be received within 7 days of Invoice date.

Cancellations
A written/emailed notification of cancellation must be received by Art Education Victoria 7 days prior to the symposium event date.  A cancellation admin fee of $50 will be applied to all cancellations. If written notification is not received or requested within this time frame no refund will be applied. If you need to cancel, please do so as soon as possible.

Non-attendance
Failure to attend without prior written cancellation will result in the forfeit of any possible refund and your invoice (registration fee) will need to be paid in full.

Non-attendance due to COVID related circumstances
Failure to attend without prior written cancellation as per the above details due to COVID related circumstances the participant will receive a full refund

Certificates
You will receive a Certificate of Attendance (for Professional Learning verification) for attending on the event date. We will email this certificate to you after the event.

 

Proudly presented in partnership with

Monash University

DET smallest
ACMI
Monash University