More dates

Payment plans

How does it work?

  • Reserve your order today and pay over time in regular, automatic payments.
  • You’ll receive your tickets and items once the final payment is complete.
  • No credit checks or third-party accounts - just simple, secure, automatic payments using your saved card.

Archives are Hot! – Panel

Share
Garden Building RMIT University
Melbourne VIC, Australia
Add to calendar

Fri, 17 Oct, 11am - 12:30pm AEDT

Event description

This session brings together representatives from four different archives to share insights into their collections, current projects, and ways artists have engaged with their holdings.

Each speaker will offer a short presentation highlighting the scope of their archive, examples of artist collaborations, and opportunities for creative engagement.

Archives are Hot! Artists in the Archive is a two-day program of workshops, talks and activations. This event is a collaboration between Next Wave and CAST.

Savannah Smith

Savannah is the administrator of the City of Melbourne Art and Heritage Collection, as well as currently being engaged as curator of the forthcoming City Gallery exhibition ‘Viva Gibb: a portrait of North and West Melbourne’. Savannah holds an MA in Art Curatorship from the University of Melbourne, and an MA in Art History from the University of St Andrews in Scotland (2018).

Nick Devlin

Nick Devlin is the Technical Collections Coordinator of the RMIT University Art Collection. He has extensive experience in collections, preservation, and exhibition production, with roles at the Melbourne University Art Collection, Ian Potter Museum of Art, and The State Library of Victoria.

Ana Tiquia

Ana Tiquia is an artist, futurist and strategist who lives and works in Naarm / Melbourne. Ana’s artworks invite participation with other ways of being, doing, or knowing. Developed through participatory, relational, and speculative processes, Ana’s work asks how we come to ‘know’ the future, what constitutes ‘data’ on our futures, and how different worldviews and practices might seed new possibilities to the present. Their work often takes the form of interventions in workplace, institutional and everyday practices.

For over 15 years, Ana has worked creatively and critically with advanced technology and data in the cultural sector – working internationally across museums, contemporary and performing arts, and design. Ana is Head of Digital Strategy, Research & Insights at State Library Victoria where they’ve recently launched SLV LAB – a digital prototyping and innovation lab for the Library and the Creative Technologist-in-Residence program. They are a proud Board Member of ANAT (Australian Network for Art & Technology).

Content note: the slideshow accompanying this panel explicit artistic imagery, including works depicting fellatio, cunnilingus, nudity, needle play, and an erect penis.


Next Wave

Next Wave is a leading not-for-profit arts organisation dedicated to supporting early-career artists working across multiple art forms. Next Wave plays a defining role in the Australian arts landscape by empowering and advocating for early-career and experimental artistic practice in Australia.

This event is part of Next Wave's ALL School programming. ALL School is an artist-led learning program designed to facilitate knowledge sharing and idea swapping.

CAST

CAST produces art research that critically engages with social and public spheres with a particular interest in how artistic practices intersect with issues of equity, access and democracy.


Accessibility

The RMIT Garden Building is located at Level 5, Building 10, RMIT University 376-392 Swanston Street, Melbourne. This is a wheelchair accessible building with an elevator located behind Streat Cafe on Bowen Street (between Swanston and Russell streets).

Some on-street parking is available on LaTrobe Street. Trams operate along Swantson Street – get off at RMIT University stop and go to Bowen Street via La Trobe Street.

Artists in the Archive is supported by City of Melbourne

Powered by

Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity

Garden Building RMIT University
Melbourne VIC, Australia
Host icon
Hosted by Next Wave