City+Sea Film Night


EVENT LINK:
https://www.uow.edu.au/events/2024/citysea-film-night.php

Ahoy fans of ‘SLOW TV’!

Come to our CITY+SEA film night — this Friday, 30 August. It’s FREE.

We’ll be showing the full movie (3hrs 40min) from 5:30pm!!

Brag to your friends that you were one of the select few who got through the WORLD PREMIERE of the whole thing in one sitting!

https://www.uow.edu.au/events/2024/citysea-film-night.php.

Settle in or drop by, as you choose.

There are some beanbags and couches but you might like to bring your own picnic blanket or folding chair (and picnic dinner!)

With many thanks,
Leah Gibbs, Kim Williams, Lucas Ihlein, Sarah Hamylton
…with guest artists Hayden Griffith and Aunty Barbara Nicholson

Article about City+Sea in Region Illawarra

Dione David has written a lively piece about the exhibition for the Region Illawarra publication. Find the article here.


Check out the Wollongong coastline as you’ve never seen it before
23 July 2024 | Dione David

UOW’s Dr Kim Williams, Associate Professor Sarah Hamylton, Associate Professor Leah Gibbs and Dr Lucas Ihlein created and curated the City+Sea exhibition, which quite literally offers a different perspective of the coastal city of Wollongong. Photo: Paul Jones.

From Bald Hill at Stanwell Tops to the Bass Point gravel loader in Shellharbour, visitors to a new exhibition at the University of Wollongong (UOW) are seeing Wollongong’s entire shoreline in a whole new way.

A three-hour and 40-minute video captured in one uninterrupted take by a cinematographer from the viewpoint of a specially chartered fishing boat is part of the City+Sea exhibition, exploring the deep connection between the city of Wollongong and the rugged coastline on which it is built.
Continue reading “Article about City+Sea in Region Illawarra”

A wild and rarely seen view of Wollongong has been unveiled

This is a re-post of an article by Tareyn Varley, published in the Illawarra Mercury on July 1, 2024.


installation photo of the city+sea video with two people watching
CAPTION: Two visitors watch footage of a boat trip from Bald Hill to Bass Point. Picture by Sylvia Liber

As a deep and bitter war rages over the future of wind farms in the Illawarra, a gentle new coastal exhibition shows what can be gained from shifting perspectives.

City+Sea is the work of four University of Wollongong researchers who set out to get to know this place they call home through its relationship with the water.

In order to understand the connection, artists Dr Kim Williams and Dr Lucas Ihlein, coastal geographer Associate Professor Sarah Hamylton and human geographer Associate Professor Leah Gibbs decided they needed to look at the land from the ocean, and not just the other way around.

They brought in Hayden Griffith, a cinematographer experienced with providing stabilised footage in the great outdoors, and set off on a fishing boat expedition from Otford to Shell Cove.
Continue reading “A wild and rarely seen view of Wollongong has been unveiled”

City+Sea launches at UOW Gallery

This is a repost of a story written by India Glyde, published on the University of Wollongong website. Photos by Paul Jones.


watercolour drawing from city+sea

New art exhibition at UOW explores connection between city and ocean

A new exhibition has captured the deep connection between the city of Wollongong and the rugged coastline on which it is built.

City+Sea, an exhibition curated and created by a team of researchers at the University of Wollongong (UOW), will officially launch this week (Thursday 20 June). The unique exhibition celebrates how the ocean has influenced the evolution of the city.

More than just a scenic backdrop, the ocean shapes the heart and soul of the city. The juxtaposition of the industrial urbanity with the wild, pristine beauty of the ocean underpins the history of Wollongong, but also informs its future.

The exhibition is an interdisciplinary collaboration between Dr Kim Williams, Associate Professor Leah Gibbs, Dr Lucas Ihlein, and Associate Professor Sarah Hamylton with artistic contributions from Hayden Griffith and Aunty Barbara Nicholson.

Associate Professor Gibbs said Wollongong is one of many global cities facing rapid social and environmental transformation in the wake of a changing climate.

“The coast is always present in the lives of Wollongong, and the Illawarra’s, residents. We live between the escarpment and the Pacific Ocean, and we’re never far from the sea and its influence,” she said.

“We wanted to explore the relationships between the city and the sea. And we also wanted to consider what that connection means in a world that is being changed dramatically by sea level rise, climate changing, and all the social, cultural and political changes that go along with it.”

The geographic footprint of City+Sea stretches from Otford in the north to Bass Point in the south. It portrays the dramatic cliffs of the escarpment to the rolling waves of the Pacific, and everything in between.

The exhibition comprises a continuous video of the coastline, filmed over three and a half hours from a fishing boat. It is complemented by a striking, intricate 26-metre-long watercolour artwork.

“This is a space for people to come together, to slow down, to yarn, to write, to draw, to create, and to share stories of this place,” Associate Professor Gibbs said. “City+Sea is not just about viewing art, but about nurturing our sense of community.”

The interdisciplinary team of researchers have long explored the tension between art and science, using their unique perspectives to raise awareness of the threat posed by climate change. In 2019, Associate Professor Hamylton, Dr Williams, Associate Professor Gibbs, and Dr Ihlein, collaborated on a song, called Rock The Boat, to raise awareness of the impacts of climate change on the Great Barrier Reef.

“Most people see art and science as a binary, but there is often an unacknowledged creativity in science. Creativity is the heart of the some of the 21st century’s most useful science. It is really about thinking outside the box,” Associate Professor Hamylton said.

The official launch of City+Sea will be held on Thursday (20 June) at 5pm, in the UOW Art Gallery in Building 29 (the Jillian Broadbent Building). The exhibition is open daily from Monday to Wednesday, from 10am to 4pm, or by appointment, until 11 September.