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Victor Harbor SA 5211
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Change Media

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Murrundi at ACE + Biennale of Sydney

January 24, 2023 Carl Kuddell

Change Media has been commissioned by ACE to collaborate with Ngarrrindjeri artist Clyde Rigney Jnr to create a video installation for ACE’s ‘A river that flows both ways’ exhibition in conjunction with Biennale of Sydney 2023.

Inspired by rivers that flow both ways, ACE has partnered with the Biennale of Sydney to present a local response to the 23rd Biennale, titled rīvus (Latin for “stream”). Dedicated to nature and water-based ecologies, rīvus tackles many timely environmental themes including pollution, climate change, and the effect of colonisation on First Peoples’ custodianship of ecosystems.

Exhibition: Adelaide Contemporary Experimental, Adelaide CBD, February 4 2023 to March 18 2023. Also see their website here: https://www.ace.gallery/watch-read-listen/river-voice-murrundi-murray-river

‘A river that flows both ways’ exhibition 2023. Photo by Graham Hancock. Courtesy of Adelaide Contemporary Experimental

Excerpt from the poetry performance:

“Our waters are not healthy.

Introduced management systems continue to severely damage Murrundi and the Kurangk.

The impacts are affecting our rights as Ngarrindjeri to remain Ngarrindjeri.

Everything is connected: If our rivers die, we die.

The River Murray is a colonial delusion, it is Murrundi who sustains us.

We urgently need to come to terms with Murrundi, with each other, for future generations to be healthy.”

Credits:

Performed by Clyde Rigney Jnr, Tangane/Yaralde Ngarrindjeri, from Murrundi and Kurangk, South Australia

Co-written + co-directed by Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell

Produced by Carl Kuddell and Jen Lyons-Reid

Recorded and edited by Change Media

Supported through the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts and the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

A river that flows both ways: Selected works from the 23rd Biennale of Sydney: rīvus is presented by the Biennale of Sydney and Adelaide Contemporary Experimental, with generous support from  the  Restart Investment to Sustain and Expand (RISE) Fund – an Australian Government initiative.  

The River Voices project was originally commissioned by the Biennale of Sydney with generous assistance from the Australian Film Television and Radio School for the 23rd Biennale of Sydney (2022), titled rīvus. 

In 2021-2023, art Tags Biennale of Sydney, ACE, Ngarrindjeri, Clyde Rigney Jnr, Murrundi, river voices, 2023

Change Media Training

December 12, 2019 Carl Kuddell

2013 June - Adelaide SA

Our Digital Media Training Toolkit offers a range of tips and tricks we have created over the years in collaboration with communities across Australia between 2010 and 2013. It covers the key elements of digital media production, from development, production and editing to ethics, impact and evaluation.

The toolkit has a strong focus on Indigenous media training and features many Ngarrindjeri participants explaining their step by step training process, during workshops in regional South Australia.

Copy of Interview Tips with Owen
Copy of Using Storyboards
Copy of 5-Point Story Plan
Copy of How to upload photos
Copy of Sony A1 HDV set up
Copy of Basic 5-point story example
Copy of Storyboarding with ComicLife
Copy of Organize Your Shoot - Equipment
Copy of How to upload example
Copy of Camera basics with Cyril
Copy of Camera basics with Chris
Copy of Camera tripod with Rita
Copy of Camera basics with Rita
Copy of Camera training with Craig
Copy of Camera training with Arnold
Copy of Camera training with Laurie
Copy of Camera basics with Junior
Copy of Camera basics with Junior
Copy of Camera basics with Jeremy
Copy of How to set up a Sony A1 camera
Copy of How to set up a tripod
Copy of How to upload footage
Copy of Uploading demo
Copy of Distribution - Burn To DVD

The toolkit was produced with assistance from the Australian Government Office for the Arts Indigenous Cultural Support and the Australia Council for the Arts Community Partnerships.

The project also received support from the South Australian Government through Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships.

Partners

Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships

Asylum Seeker Resource Centre

Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative

Australian Refugee Association Inc

Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of the Attorney General

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

VCA Centre for Cultural Partnerships

In training, 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, media literacy, media workflow, Ngarrindjeri, training, 2020

Poet responds to The Colony

September 6, 2019 Carl Kuddell
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Mike Riddle sent us his poetry half way through our exhibition in Goolwa - it blew us away. He gave us permission to publish his responses to ‘The Colony - dare to stop us’ online and so we added a few images to clarify what his poems are referring to. And we invited Mike to participate in next years collaboration for ‘_this breath is not mine to keep’.

Please contact us for the original PDF of Mike Riddle’s anthology.

In art, 2018-2020 Tags Ngarrindjeri, sculptures, What Privilege, projections, games, 2019

What Privilege - Adelaide Festival of Ideas

July 5, 2018 Carl Kuddell
WhatPrivilege_AFOI_2018_panel_500kb_IMG_4289.jpg

What Privilege panel and public game workshop at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas 2018

Read more
In thoughts, games, 2018-2020 Tags Adelaide Festival of Ideas, What Privilege, Change Media, Tallstoreez, Carl Kuddell, Jen Lyons-Reid, Clyde Rigney Jnr, Veronica Pardo, Arts Access, Ngarrindjeri, Treaty, #whatprivilege, 2018

The Colony - Murray Bridge Regional Gallery

June 1, 2018 Carl Kuddell
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The Colony - Who Comes to Visit? Exhibition, June 2018: Murray Bridge, SA.

This work-in-progress with Ngarrindjeri explores assimilation, treaty and bureaucracy as the logistics of empire.

What is your experience of whiteness and identity in the context of Treaty and colonization? How do we want to share our limited time on this planet? How do we come to terms?

The Colony is a dynamic, experimental installation, combining projection work, sculpture, line art and poetic audio-visual provocations. Opening Sunday June 17 at 2.30pm, with a Welcome to Country by Ngarrindjeri Elder Rose Rigney (find her speech below), speeches by the lead artists and drinks and nibbles. The installation will be shown from June 15 to July 22 2018.

Click here for useful links and background info about Treaty, Uluru Statement, Letters Patent and Native Title.

 

This cross-cultural collaboration was created by Jen Lyons-Reid [concept, line art, text], Carl Kuddell [concept, sculpture, text], Ngarrindjeri man Clyde Rigney Jnr [concept, text, audio], Felix Weber [sculptures, installation] and Johanis Lyons-Reid [video].

Wo is coming to visit? The Collector

Wo is coming to visit? The Collector

Welcome to the Colony

When you enter the Colony, who comes to visit? Navigate a bivouac of menacing, invasive colonies and colonial beliefs, to experience how Ngarrindjeri continue to maintain and share their cultural values in the tension between assimilation and treaty. “Nukkan Nganawi Ngarrindjeri Kringkari Ngoppen? Can you see my walk in your white world?”

Suspended in a surreal, timeless now, tinged with past, present and future colonial ventures, an array of cargo crates form a mobile bureaucratic envoy, dispatched to colonize this space.

HQ spews data, assessing and assimilating Ngarrindjeri values and dictating the terms of ‘settlement’. From its crates spill the colonizers cargo, flotsam, tools and toys, casting menacing shadows of invasion. Absurd technology prints and projects evaluation protocols and Colonizer roles, rendered as friendly, garish cartoons. A never-ending negotiation emanates from a makeshift tent. “Are you still here? Are you listening? Do I scare you? I am assimilated, I speak fluent Grey. We need to come to terms.”

Navigating this bivouac, audiences are invited to decipher the impact of colonial beliefs: What does assimilation mean to you? Which of the colonizers do you know? What is your experience of treaty and colonization? Who do you see when you look into the mirror? How do we want to share our limited time on this planet? How do we come to terms?

When you exit back into the colony through the Welcome gate, please take some information from the Community Notice Board. 

Who is coming to visit? The Critic

Who is coming to visit? The Critic

What Privilege - The Colony [stage 1] - exhibition is one of the 2017-18 outcomes of our cross-cultural collaboration during Creating Together - what can possibly go wrong?, alongside What Privilege - Unity of Oppression show at Nexus Arts, Adelaide.

What Privilege- The Colony [stage 2] - exhibition and games, 2018-19: We plan to create an interactive game world, run by a colonial bureaucracy, ‘Grey Matters Inc’, with a diverse range of artists, partners and communities. This intersectional project and participatory game will explore concepts of intersectionality, insurrection and solidarity. and Goolwa South Coast Arts Centre in August 2019 during SALA Festival.

What Privilege - this breath is not mine to keep [stage 3] - arts trail, 2019-21: In the third stage we will present the work to regional arts venues, festivals and other events, further develop interactive and mobile elements of the work and tour the game, performance and exhibition nationally.

Ngarrindjeri Elder Rose Rigney's Welcome to Country speech for The Colony

Floor sheet info clockwise from Gallery entrance:

Entrance: ‘Community Notice Board’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, lamp-post ads featuring What Privilege’s 50 colonizers and their 10 gangs, mixed media, 2018

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Left-hand wall 1: ‘Can you see me?’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, sculpture, Ngarrindjeri archival images of Clyde's ancestors Grace and Daniel Gollan, mirror-glass, metal, LED, mixed media, 3x 55cm x 45cm, 2018

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Centre: ‘The Colony Cargo’ - Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, sculpture, 5x 90cm x 90cm x 180cm, mixed media, 2018

‘You didn’t see me coming’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, mixed media, digital photo-frame, 2018

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‘Mission protocol’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Felix Weber, Clyde Rigney Jnr, kinetic sculpture, wooden printer with endless canvas loop, mixed media, 2018

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Left-hand wall 2: ‘This is not a toy’ – Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, sculpture + shadow projection, wood, torch, 2018

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Back wall: ‘Surveillance / Protection’ - Johanis Lyons-Reid, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, video projection, featuring videos created in collaboration with Ngarrindjeri, 2018

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Right-hand wall: ‘Three Cheers for Civilization’ - Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, dual channel video projection, line art, poetry, 2018

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Right-hand wall/ entry wall right corner: ‘We meet again (are you still listening?)’ - Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Felix Weber, sculpture, metal/ canvas tent, audio-video projection, 1.7mx 2.5m, 2018

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Entry/ Exit wall: ‘Story Theft’ – Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr, video projection, Ngarrindjeri values, line art, poetry, 2018

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Exit: ‘Welcome to the Colony’ – Felix Weber, Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, sculpture, 4.5mx 3m, wood, mixed media, LED-neon, 2018

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Credits:

Artistic concept / co-curators: Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell

Sculptures and installations: Felix Weber, Carl Kuddell, Jen Lyons-Reid

Video / FX: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Cartoons and line art: Jen Lyons-Reid

Poetry/ text: Jen Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell, Clyde Rigney Jnr

Spoken word performance: Clyde Rigney Jnr

Editing (slide projections and audio): Jen Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell

Seamstress extraordinaire: Jemima Thompson

Printing: PrintsAlive (Thanks Warren and Trevor)

Bump-in support: Melinda Rankin and her lovely team, Det, Don, Trevor and all the other volunteers and tech support at the Murray Bridge Regional Gallery and city council

Welcome to Country: Ngarrindjeri Elder Rose Rigney

Photo and video documentation: Johanis Lyons-Reid and Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Catering: Little Catering Co

And a big shout out to all our community participants, funders and supporters.

 

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

The project has been supported by the Regional Gallery Murray Bridge.

In art, 2018-2020 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Colonization, Treaty, Clyde Rigney Jnr, 2018

Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub

June 4, 2017 Carl Kuddell
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Inaugural Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub exhibition in Murray Bridge, featuring a wide range of Ngarrindjeri artists and cultural practices

Read more
In art, 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, exhibition, sculptures, Aboriginal, Indigenous, Cedric Varcoe, Damien Shen, Betty Sumner, Major Moogy Sumner, Lyn Lovegrove Niemz, Clyde Rigney Jnr, Jacob Stengle, Ellen Trevorrow, Bluey Roberts, 2017

Ngarrindjeri Shorts 2 - ABC

June 4, 2017 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Speaking For SeaCountry on ABC iView

Read more
In broadcast, 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Aboriginal, iView, Indigenous, Damien Shen, Cedric Varcoe, Betty Sumner, Lyn Lovegrove Niemz, ABC iView, 2017

We Are Water People

June 1, 2016 Carl Kuddell

2016 June - Coorong, Lakes and Murray River, SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

Change Media and Ngarrindjeri collaborated on a short web-documentary, as an engaging promotional tool for Ngarrindjeri and DEWNR, to showcase the significance of Ngarrindjeri science and cultural understanding of the Murray Mouth, the Murray River, the Lower Lakes and the Coorong.

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The documentary features significant Ngarrindjeri cultural and caring for country practices and locations along the Murray River, the Lower Lakes, Coorong and the Murray Mouth, to highlight the spiritual connection between Ngarrindjeri and their lands and waters.
The documentary follows the narration script and storyboard developed by NRA, Change Media and DEWNR in late 2015, with a voice-over performed by Ngarrindjeri elder Ellen Trevorrow.

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Credits

Producer: Carl Kuddell

Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Writers: Ngarrindjeri managers Luke Trevorrow, Clyde Rigney Jnr and Laurie Rankine Jnr, in consultation with the NRA Board, DENWR and in collaboration with Change Media

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr, Owen Love Jnr, Carl Kuddell

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Camera: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Owen Love

Editors: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Narrator: Ngarrindjeri Elder Ellen Trevorrow

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell

Participants and contributors include:

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Uncle Bud

Uncle Major Sumner

Prof. Daryle Rigney

Prof. Steve Hemming

Margaret Sexton

Ngarrindjeri community members

Ngarrindjeri heritage rangers

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Ngarrindjeri Media Team

Laurie, Owen, Johnny and Daryl. Arnold, Lalo

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Funded through the South Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water and Natural Resources and the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

©2016 Ngarrindjeri and Change Media

Partners

Department of the Environment, Water and Natural Resources

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

Urimbirra Wildlife Park Victor Harbor

In 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Indigenous, Aboriginal, environment, 2016

Ngarrindjeri Shorts 1 - ABC

January 27, 2016 Carl Kuddell

Everything is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Shorts 1 - ABC iView - 2016 January - SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

For Ngarrindjeri, everything is connected. Join their elders Ellen Trevorrow and Major Sumner on country as they share stories of art, culture and survival. We collaborated with Ngarrindjeri to create a beautiful web series for the inaugural Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub, linking Ngarrindjeri art, culture and country.

The Ngarrindjeri weaving, dancing and wood-carving videos showcase Ngarrindjeri culture and invite people to visit and participate in cultural activities at Camp Coorong. They were created during a series of multi-arts and capacity-building workshops with Ngarrindjeri communities in 2016.

The 4x 7min series is available on ABC’s iView arts channel under the title ‘Ngarrindjeri Shorts’. Click on the images below to watch all four episodes.

We Are Ngarrindjeri - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Weaving - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Carving - Everything Is Connected
Ngarrindjeri Dance - Everything Is Connected


FInd 30sec trailers for Everything is Connected here:

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Dance - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Weaving - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Everything Is Connected - Ngarrindjeri Carving - 30 sec Trailer - PLAY FILM

Click here for Ngarrindjeri Shorts season 2 - Ngarrindjeri Speaking for SeaCountry.

 

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News flash - Thursday May 19th, 2016:

Everything Is Connected has been nominated for the Official Selection of the International Melbourne WebFest 2016! We are also nominated for Best Non-Fiction [Australia] and Best Cinematography [International]!!!

The series also was nominated for the 2016 SA Screen Awards and will screen on ABC iView in July 2016. And we can now announce that we have received funding from the Australia Council for the Arts for a Ngarrindjeri Culture Hub, which will include another web series featuring Ngarrindjeri artists and cultural stories.

Big congrats to our team both at Ngarrindjeri and Change Media - and a huge thanks to everyone involved and our partners and friends for all your support!

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Together with our community partners, the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and the Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association, we delivered a series of multi-arts community engagement and capacity-building workshops in 2015-2016, to transmit Ngarrindjeri culture to young leaders and simultaneously created three new digital media works: Ngarrindjeri Carving with Elder Major Sumner and community members, Ngarrindjeri Dancing with Tal Kin Jeri dance group, and Ngarrindjeri Weaving with Elder Auntie Ellen Trevorrow and community members.

The inter-generational cultural exchange during the workshops, masterclasses and co-creative productions supported core elements of Ngarrindjeri cultural and arts activities.

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The artworks, artifacts and a series of engaging cinema quality multimedia artworks are now being used by Ngarrindjeri to communicate culture and connection to country to the wider community.

Production credits

Producers: Carl Kuddell

Series Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid  

Director: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Developed by: Clyde Rigney Jnr, Luke Trevorrow and Laurie Rankine Jnr, Jennifer Lyons-Reid, Carl Kuddell and Johanis Lyons-Reid, in consultation with the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Assistant Camera: Laurie Rankine Jnr, Owen Love

Editor & Post-Production: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell, Laurie Rankine Jnr 

Participants and contributors include

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Uncle Major Moogy Sumner

Ngarrindjeri community members

Alice Abdulla

Edith Carter

Latoya Love

Harmony Love

Bessie Rigney

Cheyenne Carter

Thomas Trevorrow

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Loretta Sumner

Krissa Sumner

Major Sumner

Stacia Sumner

Lianna Sumner

Tyrone Lindsay

Jordon Karpany

Damien Wanganeen

Ryan Knowles

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority team

Clyde Rigney Jnr

Luke Trevorrow

Laurie Rankine Jnr

Owen Love

Supported by:

Australia Council for the Arts

Arts SA

Change Media

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

Natural Resources Management Board SA Murray Darling Basin

The Rural City of Murray Bridge

Alexandrina Council




This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

In broadcast, 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Aboriginal, Indigenous, iView, Major Moogy Sumner, Tal Kin Jeri, Melbourne International Web Film Festival, 2016

Nation to Nation - Aboriginal Authorities

February 27, 2015 Carl Kuddell

Aboriginal Regional Authorities Initiative SA 2015 February - SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

In collaboration with the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority, we produced Nation to Nation, a 25min documentary about the new South Australian Government Aboriginal Regional Authorities (ARA) initiative. The video showcases the benefits and opportunities of Aboriginal Regional Authorities in the context of colonization and new approaches for respectful governance and support for Indigenous representation in SA.

It features the four selected trial groups at their different stages of development and implementation:

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority - Murraylands, Lower Lakes, Coorong and South Coast

Narungga Regional Authority - Yorke Penisula and surrounding islands

Kaurna Heritage Board - wider Adelaide area

Aboriginal Community Engagement Group Port Augusta and surrounding areas

The documentary features the views of Indigenous key leaders, detailing the process, development, and envisaged and current best practice and future outlook for each participating Aboriginal Authority, in Murray Bridge, Port Augusta, Point Pierce and Port Adelaide. Each trial group cover aspects of the five key issues and activities, ranging from Indigenous governance and leadership initiatives, Working on Country programs, to cultural engagement and Indigenous authority and self determination.

The project started development in October 2014, shooting across regional SA in 5 locations between November 2014 and January 2015.

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Thanks for all the amazing community support
Kaurna Nation Heritage Association Inc
Living Kaurna Culture Centre
ART Employment
Peachey Place Community Centre
Kauwi Interpretive Centre SA Water
Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute
Narungga Aboriginal Corporation Regional Authority
Point Pearce Aboriginal Corporation
Point Pearce Aboriginal Health Service - SA Health
Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority
Ngarrindjeri Ruwe Contracting
Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association
The Rural City of Murray Bridge
Aboriginal Community Engagement Group ACEG Port Augusta
Port Augusta Aboriginal Family Violence Legal Services
Port Augusta Youth Centre
Bungala Aboriginal Corporation
Davenport Community
Port Augusta City Council
Pricewaterhousecooper Indigenous Consulting Pty Ltd

Thanks to our funders:
The South Australian Government
Department of State Development - Aboriginal Affairs and Reconciliation

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and Change Media

Developed with support from Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships

© 2015 South Australian Government
Department of State Development - Aboriginal Affairs and Reconciliation, Change Media and Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

In 2014-2018 Tags Indigenous, Aboriginal, Ngarrindjeri, 2015

Miwi Wisdom - TarraWarra Biennale

August 27, 2014 Carl Kuddell

2014 August - TarraWarra Museum of Art Healesville VIC

 Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and video links may contain images and voices of people who have died.

Change Media was invited to collaborate with Professor Diane Bell on her recent one-act play with Ngarrindjeri weavers, called 'Weaving and Whispers: Miwi Wisdom' to launch at the TarraWarra Biennial 2014 'Whisper in my Mask' in Healesville, Victoria, August 16th 2014.

The co-creative, community-driven play focuses on Ngarrindjeri women's knowledge, the Hindmarsh Island Bridge affair and the role of anthropologists and curators in suppressing traditional oral knowledge.

Our contribution included creative support for the performance team, prop-making, the production of a three-channel moving image projection to illustrate and illuminate the play, for 3 projectors, and the video documentation of the work and the Q & A, produced in collaboration with our community partners from the Ngarrindjeri Media Team.

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A Word from the Playwright

In ‘Weaving and Whispers: Miwi wisdom’, we invite the audience into the world of women’s weaving. What do Ngarrindjeri women talk about while they weave?  What does that have to do with women’s sacred knowledge?  How is this knowledge understood by the institutions dedicated to conserve and preserve Indigenous knowledge? Stories, told as women weave, reveal the hidden truths of their relationship to their country, families and sacred beliefs. This knowledge is inaccessible to those who privilege written texts and dismiss oral traditions. Through their Miwi, their 'sixth sense', located in the pit of the stomach, Ngarrindjeri wisdom comes to full voice.

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We have been busy shooting exquisite footage of Auntie Ellen Trevorrow's weaving techniques and worked with Diane Bell and Darrell Sumner on the moving image elements, prop design and dramaturgy of the play.

The play was presented in two performances at the TarraWarra Museum, at the launch of the international exhibition ' Whisper in my Mask', co-curated by Djon Mundine OAM and Natalie King in Healesville, Victoria.

Credits: Moving image creation and documentation

Change Media

Jennifer Lyons-Reid - Artistic Director, Editor

Carl Kuddell - Creative Producer, Editor

Johanis Lyons-Reid - Director of Photography, Trainer


Ngarrindjeri Media Team

Laurie Rankine Jnr - Second Camera  

John Karpany - Third Camera

Cyril Trevorrow - Supervisor

Weaving and Whispers Play

Professor Diane Bell - Playwright, Co-creative Director and Producer

Cast

Aunty Ellen Trevorrow

Ellie Wilson

Debbie Rankine

Destiny Rankine

Stephanie Russell

Djon Mundine AOM

Dr. Karen Hughes

Professor Diane Bell

A special thanks to the team at Tarrawarra Museum Healesville for the invitation to be part of the 2014 Biennial ‘Whisper in my Mask’:

Djon Mundine OAM - co-curator of the Tarrawarra Biennial

Victoria Lynn - Tarrawarra Museum Director


The documentation and moving image production was supported through

The South Australian Government Arts SA Partnership for Strategic Communities

Tallstoreez Productionz

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

The Play and Performance were supported by generous contributions to the '21st Century Lamington Drive' for the ‘Ngarrindjeri Women Weavers Project’ designated by the National Foundation for Australian Women as a preferred donor fund;

by the Meningie Uniting Church through a gift to the Ngarrindjeri Lands and Progress Association

and by Victor Harbor Removals through donation of boxes for props

© 2014 Change Media, Diane Bell, Ngarrindjeri Land & Progress Association, and the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

In 2014-2018 Tags Indigenous, Aboriginal, Ngarrindjeri, 2014

We Are Ngarrinjderi - ABC

June 1, 2014 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Media 2014 June - Coorong SA

 Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and video links may contain images and voices of people who have died.


We are Ngarrindjeri is a Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and Change Media collaboration.
Through our ongoing groundbreaking cross-cultural partnership with Ngarrindjeri, Change Media has worked with the Ngarrindjeri Media Team, headed up by Luke Trevorrow, Clyde Rigney and Laurie Rankine Jnr, and the wider Ngarrindjeri community, to create a video to represent Ngarrindjeri culture, past and present, as part of the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority’s Indigenous Cultural Support program between October 2013 and June 2014.

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The project included eight collaborative workshops with Ngarrindjeri community members and their media team. The script for the video was developed with thw Ngarrindjeri Media Team over several months to identify the best way to represent Ngarrindjeri culture and ongoing connection to their lands and waters.

The participants and stakeholders decided to use excerpts from the Ngarrindjeri Land and Sea management plan for the narration. The very poetic text was developed over years by Ngarrindjeri elders and had been approved by their leaders. We then workshoped the most appropriate and feasible way to visualize the narration, to be shot across 3 main areas of the vast and beautiful Ngarrindjeri lands and waters - in the Coorong, on the Murray River and at the Encounter coast around Pt. Elliot, Goolwa and Victor Harbor.

The result is an inspiring video featuring several generations of Ngarrindjeri, elders past and present, and the breadth of Ngarrindjeri culture, lands and water, heritage and other activities.

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Credits

Producer: Carl Kuddell

Director: Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Writers: Ngarrindjeri Elders - edited selections from Ngarrindjeri Land and Sea Management Plan by Luke Trevorrow, Clyde Rigney Jnr and Laurie Rankine Jnr, in consultation with the NRA Board and Change Media

Production management: Luke Trevorrow, Laurie Rankine Jnr

Director of Photography: Johanis Lyons-Reid

Camera: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Owen Love

Editors: Johanis Lyons-Reid, Jennifer Lyons-Reid

Narrator: Ngarrindjeri Elder Major Sumner

Sound recording: Carl Kuddell

Participants and contributors include:

Auntie Ellen Trevorrow

Uncle Darrell Sumner

Uncle Major Sumner

Prof. Daryle Rigney

Prof. Steve Hemming

Margaret Sexton

Ngarrindjeri community members

Ngarrindjeri heritage rangers

Tal Kin Jeri dancers

Ngarrindjeri Media Team

Laurie, Owen, Johnny and Daryl

Funded through the Australian Government Office for the Arts Indigenous Cultural Support

Partners - Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships, Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of the Attorney General, Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association, Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority, Ngarrindjeri Ruwe Contracting, Tal-Kin-Jeri Performance group, Tallstoreez Productionz

In 2014-2018 Tags Aboriginal, Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, 2014

Meningie Foreshore Restoration

May 27, 2014 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Media 2014 May - Meningie SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and video links may contain images and voices of people who have died.

Between April and May 2014, Change Media worked with the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority and its media team and the Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources, to produce a co-creative documentary about the Meningie Foreshore Restoration project.

The video was developed with the key stakeholders and shot during a one day production and training day at Meningie on April 16, 2014.

The edit included a one-day workshop with the Ngarrindjeri media team to finish the 5 minute promotional video.

The video showcases the amazing work done at Meningie, including the planting of over 23,000 local native plants, the naturalization of the concrete drain into a wetland corridor, the interpretive trail with signage, seating and bird watching platform.

It features all stakeholders, the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority rangers and heritage team, members of the CLLMM Restoration Project, the Coorong District Council, the Meningie community and school, the Friends of Meningie group, and Ngarrindjeri elder Ellen Trevorrow.

The project was funded through The Coorong, Lower Lakes and Murray Mouth Recovery Project is funded by the South Australian Government’s Murray Futures Program, and the Australian Government

In 2014-2018 Tags Ngarrindjeri, Aboriginal, Indigenous, environment, 2014

Ngarrindjeri Media - handover

October 27, 2013 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri media team handover workshop

Read more
In training, 2012-2014 Tags Aboriginal, Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, media literacy, media workflow, 2013

Change Media Training Toolkit

June 28, 2013 Carl Kuddell

2019 August - Adelaide SA

Our Digital Media Training Toolkit offers a range of tips and tricks we have created over the years in collaboration with communities across Australia between 2010 and 2013. It covers the key elements of digital media production, from development, production and editing to ethics, impact and evaluation.

The toolkit has a strong focus on Indigenous media training and features many Ngarrindjeri participants explaining their step by step training process, during workshops in regional South Australia.

Interview Tips with Owen
Using Storyboards
5-Point Story Plan
How to upload photos
Sony A1 HDV set up
Basic 5-point story example
Storyboarding with ComicLife
Organize Your Shoot - Equipment
How to upload example
Camera basics with Cyril
Camera basics with Chris
Camera tripod with Rita
Camera basics with Rita
Camera training with Craig
Camera training with Arnold
Camera training with Laurie
Camera basics with Junior
Camera basics with Junior
Camera basics with Jeremy
How to set up a Sony A1 camera
How to set up a tripod
How to upload footage
Uploading demo
Distribution - Burn To DVD

The toolkit was produced with assistance from the Australian Government Office for the Arts Indigenous Cultural Support and the Australia Council for the Arts Community Partnerships.

The project also received support from the South Australian Government through Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships.

Partners

Arts SA Strategic Community Partnerships

Asylum Seeker Resource Centre

Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative

Australian Refugee Association Inc

Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of the Attorney General

Ngarrindjeri Land and Progress Association

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

VCA Centre for Cultural Partnerships

In training, 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, media literacy, media workflow, Ngarrindjeri, training

Tom Trevorrow tribute

April 28, 2013 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Elder Tom Trevorrow tribute - 2013 April - Coorong SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and videos links contains images and voices of people who have died.

Media Release April 21, 2013
‘Tom Trevorrow passes away’

It is with considerable sadness that we announce the passing of Mr Thomas Trevorrow at the age of 58 years from a heart attack at his office at Camp Coorong, Meningie.


Mr Trevorrow was a strong and proud Ngarrindjeri man and a leading advocate for Aboriginal Rights in Australia. He worked throughout his life to better the relationship between Indigenous and non-indigenous people and to support the advancement and recognition of the Ngarrindjeri People. With his wife Ellen, Tom worked for 30 years to develop program’s like the Ngarrindjeri Lands and Progress Association and Camp Coorong that fostered and supported Ngarrindjeri culture, arts and tradition, such as weaving. Tom shared with Ellen a commitment to enriching the life of the Ngarrindjeri community and ensured this focus was integral to the development of the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority. He worked closely alongside his brother, Mr George Trevorrow and his Ngarrindjeri brother, Mr Mathew Rigney.


Tom Trevorrow was highly respected by all for his wisdom and insight into Aboriginal matters and a key leader in advancing Indigenous issues. His contribution to asserting the position of Aboriginal People and its proper relationship to Governments and non-Indigenous people was significant at state and national levels. His reputation as an Indigenous leader and educator was internationally recognised. He was a sought after speaker by political leaders at all levels of government, by universities, local councils and community organisations. Mr Trevorrow was highly respected for his spiritual and cultural life. He was a person of great honesty and personal integrity. He will be sadly missed by many people.


Tom Trevorrow believed strongly that the relationship between Indigenous and non-indigenous people needed healing. He felt that the government did not consistently act in a meaningful or respectful manner in its dealings with Indigenous People. This was particularly the case when issues of power and control of government were being challenged by Indigenous People. Mr Trevorrow believed that the original promises of a just settlement in the 1836 Letters Patent for South Australia needed to be followed through by the State Government and that a treaty needed to be negotiated between Indigenous People and the State Government. He thought that a treaty would be a powerful healer of the pain felt by Aboriginal People in their daily lives and would provide justice to those who had passed without knowing it, and provide a proper platform for those Indigenous People living in the future.

ABOUT

Tom Trevorrow was a highly respected Ngarrindjeri man. He worked endlessly and tirelessly to advance Ngarrindjeri interests, whether this was as a group of people or for individual Ngarrindjeri people. He was Manager of Camp Coorong: Race Relations and Cultural Education Centre and Chair of the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority. He had a deep cultural understanding of his lands and waters, he knew that the lands and waters need not to be disconnected from the Ngarrindjeri People and he fought hard with governments to make them better understand. He passes with the knowledge that the government does have a better understanding of these issues. He passes knowing his beloved Ngarrindjeri People are strong and have a good base upon which to build their relationships.


Tom Trevorrow will be sadly missed by many people but the work he did throughout his life will continue to influence people’s lives into the future. Our condolences to Tom Trevorrow’s extended family including his uncles and aunties, his brothers and sisters, his wife, Ellen and their children, Thomas, Frank, Bruce, Tanya, Joe, Luke and Hank and his grandchildren.

SCREENINGS:
The tribute was screened during the funeral ceremony as thousands mourners paid their respects in Meningie, South Australia.

IMPACT & FEEDBACK:
Unfortunately we were unable to attend the funeral and farewell ceremonies in Menigie, as we were already booked and paid to be in Melbourne that day – but we said our good-byes to Tom over hours and hours of editing on the tribute. Luke had requested us to produce a tribute video that would serve as a memento of his fathers work and achievements.

We feel privileged to have had the chance to work with Tom for so many years; from Jen’s work with him, Uncle Matt and Uncle George and other Elders on the Hindmarsh Island bridge campaigns in the nineties, to our digital media projects with him over the last 5 years. Beyond his amazing work as an advocate for Indigenous lands right and cross-cultural understanding, Tom also was a visionary leader who early on saw the power of digital media for the Ngarrindjeri communities. Tom, your voice will be thoroughly missed.

Jen, Carl, Johanis, Jesse and Felix from Change Media

In 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, 2013, Tom Trevorrow

Flow - Life Giving Lands and Waters

February 28, 2013 Carl Kuddell

Flow - Life Giving Lands and Waters

Ngarrindjeri Media - 2013 February - Meningie SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and video links may contain images and voices of people who have died.

The Change Media team partnered with the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority in association with the SA Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources to produce a collaborative community-driven documentary about the Ngarrindjeri lands and waters and The Living Murray Initiative’s ICON sites during a four day capacity building workshop in Dec 2012 and edit process in Jan-Feb 2013 with the Ngarrindjeri Media Team.

Our crew worked with 12 scientists selected by DEWNR and the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority, to address a series of issues about managing the River Murray, the Lower Lakes and the Coorong. Over 4 days we investigate the different western scientific and economic approaches, in comparison with Ngarrindjeri knowledge and cultural practice shared by their elders, and find out how both sides can work together for a better understanding of the fragile environment of the Ngarrindjeri lands and waters.

The film has already triggered some interesting responses, a researcher from Flinders University said the film sets a new benchmark for collaborations between Indigenous communities and government departments, especially on the contentious issue of water and land management and related cultural rights.
We also have been asked to co-present Flow at the World Indigenous Network conference in Darwin in May 2013.
The Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority will use the documentary also as part of their Native Title claim, as it provides supporting evidence of their ongoing cultural connection to their land and waters. If our work can make a contribution on this level, then may be not all is lost…

Partners

Arts SA

Australia Council for the Arts

Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of Regional Australia, Local Government, Arts and Sport

Murray Darling Basin Authority

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

South Australian Government Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources

In festival, 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, 2013, environment, cultural flow, Murray Darling Basin

Reframing Culture - Regional Arts Australia

November 5, 2012 Carl Kuddell

Reframing Culture was a central feature at the Kumuwuki Regional Arts Australia national conference in 2012.

Read more
In festival, 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, Kumuwuki, culture, Regional Arts Australia, 2012

Ngarrindjeri Projection Masterclass

October 28, 2012 Carl Kuddell

2012 October - Hindmarsh Island SA

As a precursor to the Kumuwuki Big Wave festival, Craig Walsh and Country Arts SA held a projection masterclass in Goolwa with Ngarrindjeri participants. The masterclass explored the importance of context and space, and the meaning and context an artwork shares with its environment. Change Media were invited along to document the masterclass and develop a piece of digital media to be projected at the Regional Arts Australia festival.

Participants shared their experiences using the medium of projection art, and their experiences of person and place. The short documentary showcases the fun and adaptability of the medium, with a uniquely Ngarrindjeri perspective.

Partners

Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative

Country Arts SA

Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of Regional Australia, Local Government, Arts and Sport

In 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, 2012, Craig Walsh

Ngarrindjeri Yarluwar Ruwe Partnership

June 28, 2012 Carl Kuddell

Ngarrindjeri Media - 2012 June - Camp Coorong SA

Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this website and video links may contain images and voices of people who have died.

The Change Media Team was commissioned by the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority to document the ceremonies for the Ngarrindjeri Yarluwar Ruwe Partnership Program held on June 7 2012.
Our team conducted interviews with SA Government Minister Caica, Associate Professor Daryle Rigney, Dean of Indigenous Strategy and Engagement, Flinders University and Chair of the Ngarrindjeri Enterprises Pty Ltd.

Additional interviews including Ellen Trevorrow, Simone Ulalka Tur and Steve Hemming, Australian Studies Flinders University. Chair of Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority Research, Policy and Planning Unit.

Partners

Australia Council for the Arts Creative Community Partnership Initiative

Indigenous Coordination Centre SA

Indigenous Cultural Support, Office for the Arts, Department of Regional Australia, Local Government, Arts and Sport

Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority

In 2012-2014 Tags Indigenous, Ngarrindjeri, 2012, Yarluwar Ruwe
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Change Media is a Tallstoreez Productionz initiative assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body, and by the South Australian Government through Arts SA.

We acknowledge Ngarrindjeri as the traditional custodians of the land we live and work on, and pay respect to elders past and present. Sovereignty has never been ceded.

©2023 Tallstoreez Productionz Pty Ltd

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