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Australian—Indonesian artists collaborate
Australian artists James Hancock and Alice McAuliffe are currently
conducting a three month exhibition tour of three cities in Java
–Yogyakarta, Bandung and Jakarta. The exhibition, entitled ‘Gang’,
incorporates both the English meaning of ‘gang’ and the Indonesian
meaning ‘alley’ and is comprised of exciting new video and visual art
projects from Australia. Throughout the tour, they will collaborate
with artist-run spaces in each city to present the exhibition. In
Yogyakarta they will exhibit at the Taring Padi gallery, in Jakarta at
the arts collective Ruangrupa, and in Bandung at IF Venue. In each of
these venues, the artists will also give talks and exchange ideas about
new forms of collaboration. An innovative arts-music festival in Sydney
will follow this Indonesian leg of the Gang project in January 2006. It
will offer a unique insight into the underground art world of our
nearest neighbour.
Visit our website (www.gangfestival.com).
Alexandra Crosby
Sydney (thegang@gangfestival.com)
3 August 2005
Research to be deposited in archives
Adrian Vickers’ comments in Inside Indonesia No 83,
July—September 2005 (p 3) point to the paradoxes of Indonesian studies
in Australia. Just a little more than a century after Federation,
Australia and its citizens are still coming to terms with our country’s
geographical location. Indeed, in a short play I wrote last year to
mark the retirement of the last (and final?) lecturer of Indonesian
language at the University of Western Sydney, I drew attention to some
of these paradoxes yet again.
But whatever the vagaries of the Indonesian-Australian story, one
thing is particularly clear to me. Future generations of Australians
will not be able to look kindly upon the remarkable efforts of the
current generation of Australian Indonesianist scholars and
commentators if their record of work, scholarship, and correspondence
does not find its way into the national libraries, whether through
donation or bequest. Despite the temptation to look at only ‘a sea of
despondency’, it is the very uniqueness of the position of Australian
scholarship, translations and commentary on Indonesia that makes it so
important to ensure that this is done now.
I think it was Soekarno in 1959 who reminded Robert (‘Pig-Iron Bob’)
Menzies that our nations were destined to be neighbours forever –
notwithstanding subsequent Australian government actions to ‘excise’
territory for migration purposes!
Ian Campbell
Postgraduate researcher, University of Sydney
11 July 2005
Independence Day in Holland
You will be interested to know that after sixty years the Foreign
Minister of Holland, Mr Bot, will attend the Independence festivities
on 17 August in Jakarta. He was invited by the Foreign Minister of
Indonesia Mr Wirajuda. This is the first time that a high Dutch
official will attend this day. The Dutch always kept as the
Independence Day of Indonesia 1949 when they signed the treaty with
Indonesia. So this is a big breakthrough in the thinking of the Dutch.
You can read about the development between the two nations yourself on www.linggarjati.org.
Joty ter Kulve-van Os
2 August 2005
Inside Indonesia 84: Oct-Dec 2005
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