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City and Carriageworksmake a great culture club

Asia’s ultimate boy band, a herd of 30 life-sized horses and an exhibition about one of Australia’s largest industrial disputesare being delivered thanks to a partnership between the City of Sydney and Australia’s largest multi-arts centre.

Korean Pop
(supplied)

The City will work withCarriageworksto deliver the projects as part of its 2016/17arts program, as well as events for the Chinese New Year Festival and Art & About Sydney.

 

Lord Mayor Clover Moore said the collaboration would boost Sydney’s arts and culture scene with some of the world’s leading contemporary artists and performersbeing drawn to Sydney.

 

“Working with Carriageworks, which has gone from strength to strength, we can attract top Australian and international artists to create works that will inspire and start conversations,” the Lord Mayor said.

 

“Sydney has an international reputation for showcasing inspiring arts and we’re building on oursupport for the cultural and creative life of Sydney with an annual investment of over $34 million.”

 

Lisa Havilah, Director of Carriageworks, added: “Carriageworks is excited to be collaborating with the City of Sydney to deliver these diverse and engaging contemporary arts programs for our communities.”

 

The three projects to be presented jointly by the City and Carriageworks in 2016/17 are:

 

K-pop concerts – 5 and 6 February 2016

 

Two concerts by Asia’s ultimate boy band will mark the start of Sydney’s 2016 Chinese New Year Festival.

 

Together with Carriageworks and SBS PopAsia,the City will bring Boyfriend and special guests JJCC to Sydney for the first concerts of their kind at the Eveleigh venue.

 

Kicking-off at 6pm each night, the concerts will be hosted by SBS’s Jamaica Del La Cruz and Andy Trieu, and feature DJs spinning the latest K-pop music followed by live performances by JJCC and Boyfriend.

 

NICK CAVE: HEARD•SYD –November 2016

 

Sixty local dancers will come together to create a group of 30 ‘horses’ for a unique, choreographed performance art piece in the heart of the city.

 

By embodying extravagant ‘sound suits’ made of brightly-coloured raffia, the dancers will be transformed into life-size horses that will perform to the beat of pounding drums and music.

 

Created by internationally acclaimed American artist Nick Cave, HEARD•SYD will be the first major work presented by Cave in Australia.

 

1917: The Great Strike – 3 August–17 September 2017

 

In 2017, the City and Carriageworks will present an exhibition to mark the centenary of one of Australia’s largest industrial disputes –1917:The Great Strike.

 

The commemorative exhibition will feature large-scale, striking images, moving footage, oral history excerpts, song and poetry, alongside commissioned artworks that depict the watershed event.  

 

The strike began in August 1917 when employees at Eveleigh and the Randwick Tram Sheds walked-off the job protesting against new working conditions imposed during World War 1.

 

The nationwide strike lasted six weeks, but its consequences lingered for decades, creating a highly politicised workforce and a generation of politicians, including premiers and prime ministers.

 

 

 


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