As part of its exchange program with the Footscray Community Arts, a cultural institution located in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, The Saison Foundation will co-host an online symposium to deepen understanding of indigenous cultural and artistic activities in Japan and Australia.
The symposium will introduce the activities and indigenous cultural programs of Footscray Community Arts, which opened in 1974, as an example of indigenous cultural and artistic activities in Japan and Australia. It will also look back on the cultural activities of Porotokotan (formerly the Ainu Museum) in Shiraoi, Hokkaido, from its opening to the present, and exchange opinions on the possibilities and prospects for the future international exchange program.
Thursday, March 17, 2022
4:00 pm – 6:30 pm (JST/UTC+9), 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm (AEDT/UTC+11)
Speakers:
Vicki Couzens (Artist, Footscray Community Arts Indigenous Advisory Group)
Dan Mitchell (Senior Producer: Indigenous Cultural Program, Footscray Community Arts)
Masahiro Nomoto (Director of Culture Promotion Department, National Ainu Museum and Park UPOPOY)
Where:
Zoom Webinar
How to register:
To register for the online symposium, please fill in the Zoom Webinar Registration Form:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_OWWRrDB6SHGx6uCOWpC00A
Participation cost:
Free
Profile of Speakers:
Vicki Couzens (Artist, Footscray Community Arts Indigenous Advisory Group)
Vicki Couzens is a Gunditjmara woman from the Western Districts of Victoria. Vicki acknowledges her Ancestors and Elders who guide her work. She has worked in Aboriginal community affairs for almost 40 years. Vicki’s contributions in the reclamation, regeneration and revitalisation of cultural knowledge and practice extend across the ‘arts and creative cultural expression’ spectrum including language revitalisation, ceremony, community arts, public art, visual and performing arts, and writing. She is Senior Knowledge Custodian for Possum Skin Cloak Story and Language Reclamation and Revival in her Keerray Woorroong Mother Tongue. Vicki is employed at RMIT as a Vice Chancellor’s Indigenous Research Fellow, developing her project ‘watnanda koong meerreeng , tyama-ngan malayeetoo (together body and country, we know long time)’. The key objective of this project is to produce model/s, pathways and resources for continuing the reinvigoration of Aboriginal Ways of Knowing Being and Doing with a special focus on language revitalisation.
Dan Mitchell (Senior Producer: Indigenous Cultural Program, Footscray Community Arts)
Festivals, circus, theatre, music and public art are some of the many mediums Dan has worked in during his 30-year career as a creative producer. A person with Whadjuk Noongar and European heritage, Dan has instinctively been drawn to the tension, dysfunction and contradiction inherent in Australian culture. Dan is principally interested in our shared narratives, experience and journeys through both displacement from, and connection to, place. Through this, he navigates his way in the hope of coalescing an understanding of shared identity through art, ritual and story. Arriving at Footscray Community Arts in 2019 to co-produce the Due West Arts Festival, he now oversees the Indigenous Cultural Program.
Masahiro Nomoto (Director of Culture Promotion Department, National Ainu Museum and Park UPOPOY)
Born in 1963 in Shiraoi Town. He was the director of the Ainu Museum (Porotokotan) from 2012 to 2018. He has been involved in the planning and production of Ainu cultural exhibitions in Japan and abroad and has created Ainu crafts himself. In 1999, he produced an Ainu oceangoing boat itaomacip for the exhibition “AINU: Spirit of Northern People” at the Smithsonian National Museum, which later became a part of permanent exhibit for the section of ‘history of culture and exchange’ among the peoples of the North Pacific.
In recent years, he has been working on the exhibition and exchange of indigenous peoples in museums and art galleries around the world. Since 2018 he has been working as the Director of Culture Promotion Department, National Ainu Museum and Park UPOPOY.
About Footscray Community Arts
Footscray Community Arts is an independent creative precinct in the western suburbs of Melbourne. It’s a place for artistic vibrancy, new work, big ideas and important conversations. Our programs focus on the nexus between creativity and social justice. We platform and prioritise the voices of artists from Indigenous, migrant and refugee, disability and LGBTQIA+ communities. Our year-round program offers unique performances, exhibitions, collaborative art workshops and community events.
https://footscrayarts.com/
Co-hosted by Footscray Community Arts, The Saison Foundation
Supported by The Foundation for Ainu Culture
Supported by the Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan in fiscal 2021
Visiting Fellows offers artistic development opportunities for international artists and arts managers to research the contemporary performing arts scene in Japan.
Check out The Saison Foundation’s Annual Report for 2022.
現代演劇・舞踊の活動を対象に、助成金/資金だけでない複合的な支援を行っています。
詳細については、「助成を受ける」をご参照ください。
Visiting Fellows offers artistic development opportunities for international artists and arts managers to research the contemporary performing arts scene in Japan.
Check out The Saison Foundation’s Annual Report for 2021.
The Saison Foundation extends its sincere gratitude to the following Legal Entity Support members and for their generous contributions (as of March 2023/in alphabetical order):