public program, emerging producer 2022

Adelaide Fringe 2023: Expressions of Interest

Expressions of interest have closed for The Mill’s Adelaide Fringe 2023 season.

The Mill welcomes artists working in all areas of performance - from live music to theatre, dance, comedy and more. Our venue is a great space for risk-taking, trying out new ideas or presenting fully-realised works.

The Breakout is a 50-seater black-box theatre space adjacent to The Mill’s 35 artist studios and exhibition spaces. Located a 15 minute walk from Rundle Street, our theatre is perfect for intimate artist-audience interactions.

While the EOI is closed, we encourage those interested in joining our waitlist to contact The Mill Associate Producer Louie Dempsey.

Before you send an EOI, complete the following steps:

  • Read the Venue Information Pack to familiarise yourself with our venue.

  • Collate as much information about your show as you can (about you/your show, technical specifications, marketing plans, etc).


Key Dates

Tuesday, August 23: EOIs Open

Sunday, September 18: EOIs Close

September 23 - October 7: Offers sent out

Thursday, October 20: Adelaide Fringe printed program deadline


Any questions please email The Mill Associate Producer Louie Dempsey.


public program, galleries

Exhibition: The World Needs Us, We Need the World: Political poster art for climate action

Image: Australian Youth Climate Coalition ‘Climate Justice Bootcamp’ poster illustration.

October 7 - November 18, 2022

Opening event: Friday, October 14, 6-8pm

School Holiday workshop: Tuesday October 11, 1pm

Opening hours: Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


For Nature Festival 2022, The Mill presents a new 6-week exhibition that celebrates the role of art as activism in the context of climate crisis and various political issues. The exhibition features poster art from the Australian Youth Climate Coalition (AYCC), historical works from the FUMA collection, alongside contributions from local activists.

We invite the general public, young people, artists and creatives to contribute to a community poster wall as part of the exhibition. A poster making station with materials will be a permanent feature of the exhibition, with audiences invited to create a poster and add it to the wall. Contributing artists can respond to the theme ‘The World Needs Us, We Need the World’. 

A free school holidays workshop (Tuesday, October 11) will invite young people and their families to create and contribute to the exhibition.

Call-out for contributions:

We invite you to contribute a poster to the exhibition to be included in the community poster wall. Flex your creative muscles and design something meaningful and authentic that responds to the theme of the exhibition ‘The World Needs Us, We Need the World’. See examples from AYCC below!

Artworks must be:

  • A3 or smaller

  • Able to be pinned to the wall

  • Welcoming, inclusive and appropriate for all ages (keep it clean folks!)

  • include your name, email and phone number on the reverse

Delivered to The Mill by September 30, 2022

Att. Adele Sliuzas, The Mill, 154 Angas Street, Kaurna Yarta, Adelaide, 5000

Artworks can be collected from November 21, or include a return self addressed envelope

 
 

This exhibition has support from

 
 

masterclass series, public program

OzAsia Masterclass: The Craft of Fight Choreography with Maria Tran

All images: Anna Kucera.

Masterclass

When: Tuesday, October 25, 4-6pm

Where: AC Arts, Rehearsal Studio, Level 3, 23 Light Square, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: $30 (+ booking fee)

Studio open at 3:45pm, please arrive then to check in and warm up.


The Mill in partnership with OzAsia Festival present a masterclass with Maria Tran exploring action fight choreography and stage combat.

Maria Tran is touring to Adelaide to perform in ACTION STAR as part of 2022 Oz Asia Festival.

About the masterclass:

The central focus is to give opportunities for artists to explore themselves performatively through the format of action fight choreography and stage combat. Creatives will unpack leadership skills, courage, kindness, and what being strong and taking action means. Skills include improvisation, voice and movement devising, acting, and creating group work scenes.

Experience level:

16+, any level or experience welcome.


This program has support from

 
 

sponsored studio

Sanaa Sponsored Studio: LK Artist in Residence call-out

Sanaa is a not-for-profit, multidisciplinary cultural arts collective, facilitating and celebrating the power of art and its capacity to bridge cultural gaps. The Mill’s partnership with Sanaa offers one Sponsored Studio for culturally diverse artists.

An African artist will join The Mill’s studio community for 6-weeks, also presenting an artist talk and workshop with support from The Mill and Sanaa. The residency will culminate in a group exhibition at Kerry Packer Civic Gallery at the Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre, February-March 2023.


 

This Sponsored Studio has support from

 

public program, masterclass series, galleries

Workshop: Yarning Circle with Marika Davies and Natalie Austin

Image: Marika Davies with Natalie Austin’s Opal Painting.

Workshop

This is a special event for folks who identify as non-binary or women.

When: Saturday, July 30, 11am-12pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: $15 (+ booking fee)


The Mill invites you to join us for an intimate yarning circle with exhibiting Antikjrita artist Natalie Austin and Wangkangurru woman and independent curator Marika Davies.

Natalie will have a chat about her work and Marika will keep our hands busy with some weaving while chatting about her role as exhibition curator. We'll also have some tea and biccies!

About the exhibition:

Memory of Water by Antikjrita woman Natalie Austin speaks of the artists connection to Country as motif within her life. Natalie traces her life from child, teen, mother and now grandmother and the meaningful role that water has in her understanding of self, Country and community. Natalie has worked with Wangkangurru woman and independent curator Marika Davies to develop this exhibition, an inaugural collaboration between The Mill and regional South Australian Aboriginal artists. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue essay written by Yankunytjatjara / Kokatha woman and well-known poet Ali Cobby Eckermann.

Memory of Water is presented in partnership with Ku Arts, Ripple Effect/HumanKind and City of Adelaide.


This exhibition has support from

public program, viray thach, galleries

Exhibition: Viray Thach, Resilience

All images: Ivy Lee, @ivyleecreative

July 18 - September 16, 2022

Opening event: Friday, July 29, 6-8pm

Opening hours: Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


This SALA The Mill's Showcase space hosts Resilience, a solo exhibition by illustrator and educator Viray Thach.

The exhibition elevates the voices of sexual assault survivors and opens conversations of the commonly misunderstood topic. Viray showcases her skills as a digital illustrator, as well as exploring new techniques developed through her six month studio residency at The Mill. She is the recipient of the 2022 Sponsored Studio a new initiative in co-operation with Mahmood Martin Foundation. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue essay written by The Mill's Writer in Residence Renee Miller.

Presented with support from Mahmood Martin Foundation and Arts SA.

Content warning: This exhibition includes sensitive topics around sexual assault. Please be mindful before attending.


This exhibition has support from

 
 
 

The Mill’s Visual Arts Studio Residency is presented in cooperation with Mahmood Martin Foundation

 
 
 

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: Tarsha Cameron and Tailor Oriana-Julie Winston, One

In May-July 2022, The Mill continued our focus on Visual Arts collaborations, presenting One, a new exhibition by emerging multidisciplinary artists Tarsha Cameron and Tailor Oriana-Julie Winston. With an interest in developing relational connections and shared stories, Tarsha and Tailor developed a unique, evolving installation in the gallery. During the first ‘soft opening’ week audiences were invited to visit and witness the work in progress, share their responses and also contribute. With sculptural, installation, sound, photography, video, painting and textiles, One is an exploration of collaboration and connectivity.

Image: Tarsha and Tailor in the Exhibition Space, Photo Morgan Sette.

Artist statement

The threads of connection

Stay

Forever present

In our genes

Across space and time

And

In our bodies; flesh and ethereal 

Life is an entangled whole

Connectivity surrounds us. It is more than just between you and I, but also between the moon and the stars, the trees and the sea; all living beings living in symbiosis with one another. Close your eyes and notice for a moment. Breathe. Feel it in the air. Feel it in you.

One attempts to creatively explore and materialise the more complex and subtle forms of collaboration that occur in everyday life, yet remain hidden to our visual and auditory perception. We are in constant developmental flux with ourselves, nature, our immediate and distant surroundings; reciprocally invoking the law of cause-and-effect that expands across time, space and place.

The process leads us into a philosophical investigation where everything co-exists, akin to an ecosystem with many differing identities that inform, inspire, and rely on the other. It is a continuous collaborative exploration as we respond to and negotiate nature, each other,  and our close and more remote environmental, historical and ancestral storylines. 

Situated on Kaurna Yarta, One culminates as a work that is both fluid and organic, still, yet full of life. A reflection of the interconnectedness of existence.

Social photos: Daniel Marks / All other photos: Morgan Sette.

public program, galleries

Exhibition: Natalie Austin, Memory of Water, curated by Marika Davies

Artwork: Camping Along the Creek, Natalie Austin

July 18 - September 16, 2022

Opening event: Friday, July 29, 6-8pm

Opening hours: Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


This SALA The Mill presents a new solo exhibition, Memory of Water, by Antikjrita woman Natalie Austin, supported by Wangkangurru woman and independent curator Marika Davies. Natalie speaks of the artists connection and relationship to Country as motif within her life. Natalie traces her life from child, teen, mother and now grandmother and the meaningful role that Country has in her understanding of self and community. She says ‘painting is my passion and gives me peace.’ Natalie has worked with curator Marika Davies to develop this exhibition, an inaugural collaboration between The Mill and regional South Australian Aboriginal artists.

Memory of Water is presented in partnership with Ku Arts, City of Adelaide and Human Kind Studios. The exhibition has also had generous support from Ursula Halpin at Port Pirie Regional Art Gallery.


This exhibition has support from

 
 

masterclass series, public program, viray thach

Masterclasses and Workshops: SALA 2022 at The Mill

Each year The Mill presents a series of SALA Masterclasses with prominent South Australian artists. We invite practicing artists and creatives to participate, offering the opportunity to grow their practice through learning new skills, connecting with peers and developing insight into professional artists practice.

The Mill's Masterclass program runs throughout the year as a professional development program for artists, offering workshops with established international and national touring artists in both performance and visual arts. These diverse sessions draw South Australian artists into global conversations around aesthetic, performance and creative practice.


Photo: Morgan Sette

Masterclass: Lost Wax Cast Jewellery with Nativis

When: Saturday, August 13 or 20, 12-3:30pm

Where: The Mill’s Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St,

Cost: $250 (+bf)

All materials and light refreshments provided.


Learn to carve jewellers wax to create your own ring using the lost wax casting method. We'll carve with files, pick with tools and melt with flame until you've made yourself a masterpiece. Jewellers wax is a medium like no other; easy to get lost in and can take on so very many forms. We will explore different shapes, textures and techniques (please note, this workshop does not include working with stones). No two rings are ever the same, just uniquely yours!

At the end of the session, Nativis, aka Elly, will collect all your finished wax moulds. They're then cast in solid silver, after which Elly tackle the processing for you, and return to you your shiny, finished piece. Making jewellery is wonderful but sharing the experience is more-so, this is my way to get people involved and bring them closer to a slow and conscious way of creating.


About the artist:

Elly Pepper is a predominantly self-taught jeweller; creating one-off pieces from recycled solid silver and gold, and ethically sourced stones. Her works range from simple studs to future heirloom pieces, as she enjoys continuing to build her skillset and experimenting with new techniques.

As a trained horticulturalist, her work is continuously inspired by nature, the earth, and the beautiful stones she holds, particularly Australian opal. Elly began offering wax workshops mid-2021, hoping to bring to life the opportunity to make a gift instead of buying it, an experience for you and your loved ones to create treasures you will hold forever, made by your own two hands. Her dream of bringing people together over food and drink to create is well and truly alive within these workshops!


Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Masterclass: Process-based Approaches & Resolutions with Ruby Chew


Join Ruby Chew for a two day process based workshop at The Mill. Ruby will guide participants through techniques in abstraction and alternative making techniques building towards creating an abstract painting on wood board.

This workshop is suitable for beginners through to established artists, with a focus on experimentation, play, exploration, and composition. Ruby is a generous teacher with many years experience teaching and as a practicing artist.

Students will need to provide some basic materials (scissors, glue stick, wood board etc. list will be provided with ticket), and The Mill will provide other materials for the group to share.

About the artist:

Ruby Chew is a painter who employs process-based making techniques to create open dialogues with her viewers whilst exploring the fluidity of pictorial space. Completing a BA Visual Arts Hons. at Adelaide Central School of Art (2010), along with further study at Central Saint Martins, London and the Florence Academy of Art, Florence, Ruby’s practice is deeply rooted in traditional painting techniques, which are the foundation of her practice. 

Ruby is a Ruth Tuck Scholarship recipient (2015) and has exhibited, taught and held residency positions interstate and overseas. She has had numerous solo exhibitions, notably Portraits at Magazine Gallery (2011), Spitting Image at Hill Smith Gallery (2012) and The Difference Between Things at Floating Goose Studios (2021). 

Her artworks are in public and private collections across Australia, Canada, Malaysia and London. She currently lives and works in Adelaide, South Australia.


Image: Viray Thach

Workshop: Beginners lino printing with Viray Thach

When: Sunday, August 21, or Saturday, September 10, 12-4pm

Where: The Mill’s Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St

Cost: $40 (+bf)

Materials and light refreshments provided


If you're looking for an opportunity to be creative, join Sponsored Studio artist Viray Thach for an illustration and lino print workshop. This beginners workshop will introduce skills in preparing a design, carving lino and printing, and all participants will take home finished artworks.

Held in The Mill’s exhibition space alongside Viray’s solo exhibition Resilience, the workshop will be intimate and casual and is open to complete beginners.

About the artist:

Viray Thach is an emerging digital illustrator and educator. Her style, inspired by pop art, art deco and art nouveau, also sees deep-rooted influences from traditional Kbach ornamental designs that pay homage to her Cambodian roots. Viray’s iPad is the digital sketchbook where all the magic happens. Here, she marries the old and the new, using cybernation to recreate time-honoured textures and techniques into tactile designs that evoke a warm, homely compassion.

Formally educated in graphic design, business management and education, Viray is not only dedicated to her role as an illustrator, but as an educator and mentor, cultivating young minds and passing her multi-creative knowledge on to creative visionaries of the next generation. She remains business-minded and efficient while still delivering work full of the heart and soul.

At the root of it, Viray uses her art to tell a story – whether that is through character-rich portraits, lively illustrations, or bringing her mind’s eye to life through magnificent murals.

sponsored studio, sponsored studio recipien

MMF Sponsored Studio 2022: Tikari Rigney

The Mill is thrilled to announce Tikari Rigney as the recipient of the Sponsored Studio for the July-December 2022 residency. The Mill’s Sponsored Studio is a new initiative supported by the Mahmood Martin Foundation. In 2022 two selected artists will join our community, with each receiving 6-months of studio space and an exhibition outcome as part of Gallery II.

Photo: Johnny von Einem


 

The Mill’s Sponsored Studio program is presented in cooperation with Mahmood Martin Foundation

 
 
 

brink theatre residency, public program, emerging producer 2022

Brink Residency: Samuel Lau, Q&A 'Walk of the Ancestors'


Photo: Lok.

Public Q&A

When: Friday, July 8, 6pm

Where: The Mill Breakout, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Duration: 1 hour

Cost: Free


The Mill will be hosting a work-in-progress Q&A for Samuel Lau’s Walk of the Ancestors, with mentorship from Brink Productions director Chris Drummond.

_

Walk of the Ancestors is a project that explores how Eastern philosophy and values, such as filial piety and ancestor veneration have manifested and directed Samuel Lau’s life as a second-generation Chinese- Australian.

This development opportunity has provided a mentorship with Director Chris Drummond to explore further into the writings of the play.

The Q&A will be between Samuel and Chris, supported by The Mill Associate Producer Louie Dempsey.


This residency has support from

 
 

expand

Expand: Projection Techniques and Technologies facilitated by Margie Medlin

In 2023, six artists (visual artists, performers, dancers film and media artists) will participate in a collaborative intensive facilitated by Margie Medlin with support from award-winning creative producers and multimedia specialists Illuminart.

PTT combines rapid skills development in emerging technologies in art and exhibition outcomes to support the exploration of interdisciplinary, site-specific and audience-focused new work.

This program follows Expand’s 2021 program Cinematic Experiments, a 10-day laboratory facilitated by Medlin, The Mill and Mercury CX, in response to creatives pushing further into exploring hybrid / digital platforms. The six artists for PTT will be selected from those who attended Cinematic Experiments, to continue this learning.

PTT participants will experience four, high-level professional development masterclasses in The Breakout at The Mill, and dedicate time to experimenting with projection technologies within their practice. The work created will culminate in Make|Shift, a 6 week immersive group exhibition in The Mill’s Exhibition Space, including an artist forum and access tours to engage audiences in the process of creation.

ilDance Professional Development Opportunity, public program

ilDance Professional Development Audition

The ilDance Professional Development program provides the opportunity for an emerging South Australian based dancer within five years of graduating from a tertiary institution, to work with ilDance’s project-based junior company, ilYoung, in the creation process and tour of a new dance work throughout Sweden.

This program is presented in partnership between The Mill, Adelaide, and ilDance, Sweden.

The opportunity will provide valuable mentorship from ilDance company’s founders and choreographers Lee Brummer and Israel Aloni, as well as experience working and touring with a professional dance company.

ilDance is an international and independent contemporary dance company that initiates and operates several pioneer projects. The company was founded in 2012 by its current Artistic Directors, Israel Aloni and Lee Brummer, and it is based in Gothenburg, Sweden.

The total value of The ilDance Professional Development opportunity, going directly to the artist and presented in partnership between The Mill and ilDance, Sweden, is approximately $17,000.

Important information

This is comprised of both cash and in-kind support provided to the successful recipient: 

  • $4,000 cash from The Mill toward travel, travel insurance, any necessary visas and accomodation

  • $13,000 value from ilDance, a significant in-kind contribution to the dancer’s participation in ilYoung. This will cover costs associated with the creation process, travel and accommodation during the creative development and performance tour, artistic mentorship, workshops and creator fees.

  • $35,000 SEK accommodation

  • $7,000 SEK travels (creation + tour)

  • $50,000 SEK mentorship, workshops & classes with guests

  • Total: $92,000 SEK ($13,000 AUD)

Residency and Tour Dates: Late June/early July - September 2023 (exact dates TBA).

Eligible dancers: 

  • Final year students or graduates from AC Arts or other SA-based dancers from other institutions within 5 years of graduation (and between the ages of 18-27 at the time of the audition)


Audition details

When: Sunday, December 11, 2022, 10am-5pm (studio available from 9am, audition will include a warm-up class)

Where: Dance Hub SA, Lion Arts Centre, Cnr Morphett St & North Tce, Kaurna Yarta (Adelaide)

Dancers are required to bring: 

  • A printed version of your CV including a recognisable photo of yourself on the day of the audition

  • A bottle of water and a small lunch with them for the audition day

Following the audition, applicants will be shortlisted. These applicants will progress to the next round of the audition process and will be asked to complete a more detailed written application and/or interview. The successful applicant will be notified by the end of January 2023.

Applicants are required to read the information sheet about ilDance and the program before registering.

You must register to attend the audition:

  • Email leebrummer@ildance.se with the following information:

    • Your CV (including DOB, Tertiary Institution/Graduation date)

    • A link to a 1-2 minute video of yourself answering the following question; "What interests you about this opportunity and how will it benefit you?”

  • Deadline for registration: December 4, 11:59pm

    

For more information about this audition contact The Mill CEO/Artistic Director Katrina Lazaroff.


Past Events

spotlight residency, public program, emerging producer 2022, brand x residency

Breakout Residencies: Olenka Toroshenko showing, 'I am Root'

Photo: Lauren Connelly (LALA Photography).

Public showing

When: Friday, June 10, 6pm

Where: The Mill Breakout, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Duration: 1 hour (including casual Q&A)

Cost: $10 (+ booking fee)


You are invited to the work-in-progress showing of I am Root, a ritual performance piece by Olenka Toroshenko.

_

Most of us are transplants. Uprooted from one country and resettled, making home in another's. Do you remember where you came from? What happens when culture, language and ancestry are left behind?

Seed. Water. Root. Grow. Harvest. Eat. Die. Decompose. Repeat.

Told from the perspective of a Ukrainian Canadian living in Australia, this ritual performance piece wonders how one might question, create and nourish culture in a globalised, colonised world. Olenka enlists her mother tongue (Ukrainian) and the mediums of song, dance, folk traditions and recipes, story, poetry and prayer to enliven the depths of the unspoken, mysterious places where spirit lives...if we're willing to cultivate it.

We are future roots.


The showing with be followed by a short Q&A with Olenka, presented by The Mill CEO / Artistic Director Katrina Lazaroff & Associate Producer Louie Dempsey. Audiences will have the opportunity to ask questions about the development and provide feedback about the performance.


This residency has support from

 
 

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: Dance Launchpad 2022

Presented by The Mill and supported by venue partner Australian Dance Theatre (ADT), Dance Launchpad is a professional development program designed to support emerging dancers to build experience in the professional industry, by working with local South Australian choreographers.

The program nurtures the ecology of dance in SA by commissioning established SA choreographers to make new work, and share their industry knowledge with emerging SA dance artists.

In 2022 the outcome was the creation of two choreographic works, Loom by Amanda Phillips and Semblance by Tobiah Booth-Remmers. These works were performed by emerging dancers Jess Minas, Amelia Watson, Isobel Stolinski and Amelia Walmsley, presented as a double-bill performance at ADT’s Odeon Theatre.

This program resulted in professionally filmed showreels for the four dancers, which you can watch below.


Full length performances

Composer: Alexander Waite Mitchell

Videographer: Peter Drew

Lighting designer: Aaron Herczeg

Videographer: Peter Drew


Amelia Walmsley


Amelia Watson


Isobel Stolinski


Jess Minas

Breakout Residencies: Daniel Jaber showing, 'Putrid Piggy'


Photo: Supplied by artist.

Public showing

When: TBC

Where: The Mill Breakout, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Duration: 1 hour

Cost: Free


You are invited to the work-in-progress showing of Putrid Piggy, a new performance by Daniel Jaber supported by Arts South Australia and The Mill. 

Jaber's new work-in-development takes provocation from the infamous narrative of Lorena and John Bobbitt, interwoven with reference to the work of radical author Valerie Solanas (SCUM Manifesto) - to create a maximalist theatrical experience charged with satirical sexual energy, confronting thematic exploration and unique choreographic investigations.  

Witness the beginnings of this work’s manifestation, performed by a powerhouse trio of dancers and hear about the key-creatives’ concepts surrounding their collaborative contributions.  

This work contains adult themes and sexual references. Recommended for mature audiences

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: Jingwei Bu, ‘Life Maps’

The Mill is excited to present Life Maps, an exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Jingwei Bu. This series of drawings have been created through performative action, using stylized gestures as a record of movement. Jingwei’s process of intuitive action uses techniques of focus and meditation to translate emotion and memory onto the paper.

Photos: Morgan Sette

Image: Jingwei Bu in front of works from Life Maps series (photo: Morgan Sette).

Each mark has its character to me, together they are telling complex stories. This exhibition shows the old Life Maps from the previous years and the recent ones since my mother’s passing two years ago. The making of new life maps has helped me get through the grieving and to gradually heal.

⏤ Jingwei Bu

Artist statement

My Life Maps drawings are a performative movement of the hands. The marks, numbers and lines carry the intuitive motion performed on the paper. The endurance of the movement uses the paper as a stage and as a boundary for action. The results of the performances are either purely intuitive or an action for a reflection on a life event. The repetition of motion is like meditation and ritual. The repetition is never the same.

The freedom of movement is paralleled by the process of creating space among lines, forms, and marks that resonate the actions of navigating distance and space among people. The longer the movement, the deeper I can go into the subconscious of emotion and memory accumulated in the life journey. To reach, to fix, to answer the questions locked.

Image: Jingwei Bu performing Life Map Trap, 2021(Photo: Vision Studio).

Photos: Ying He

public program, galleries

Exhibition: The Mill Showcase, Kirsty Martinsen, 'Bodiness: Call and Response'

Artwork: Kirsty Martinsen.

May 2 - July 1, 2022

Kirsty Martinsen and Erin Fowler

Opening event: Friday May 13, 6-8pm

Where: The Mill Exhibition Space, 154 Angas St, Kaurna Yarta

Cost: Free


The Mill Showcase is a gallery space dedicated to artists who work in our studio spaces at our Angas Street location, exhibiting some of the artworks and products that have been produced under our roof. The Mill Showcase profiles our artists, so that you can put a face to the name and get to know some of our dedicated makers.

This Eighth edition of The Mill Showcase, Bodiness: call and response is a collaboration between painter Kirsty Martinsen and dancer Erin Fowler. The exhibition further develops ideas begun in 2016 when Kirsty collaborated with NY-based theatre maker Erwin Maas creating a work based on the experience of ‘otherness’ as a disabled woman.

The exhibition is part retrospective, including works spanning a 21 year period, alongside new works and works in progress. This significant exhibition follows the evolution of Kirsty’s practice, from large format drawings and paintings through to recent smaller scale works and a new work to be created in situ with Kirsty using her wheelchair as a tool to draw across a working surface on the floor.

We also welcome award winning theatre-maker, dancer and singer Erin Fowler to collaborate with Kirsty in a ‘Call and Response’ performance that extends the relationship between the body, movement and gesture as explored through Kirsty’s ourve. Erin was a Co-Founder of The Mill, she and Kirsty have had a long term creative relationship since connecting here back in 2014.

virtual gallery

Virtual Gallery: Adrianne Semmens and Jennifer Eadie, Unravel

From February to April 2022 The Mill welcomed South Australian based artist and writer Jennifer Eadie and dance practitioner, Adrianne Semmens to present their collaborative project Unravel.

The artists invite you to first read through their accompanying text, which can be dowloaded as a PDF from the linked image below, and then take time to look through the videos and photographic documentation of the exhibition.

This Virtual Gallery is an online offering to bring you into the space virtually.

(Images below: Daniel Marks)

Q&A with artists Adrianne Semmens and Jennifer Eadie

Hi, my name is Adele Sliuzas, I am the Visual Arts Curator at The Mill. I’d like to acknowledge the Kaurna people as the traditional custodians of the Country that this exhibition takes place on, and where I am privileged to live and work. It’s so great to be here in the Unravel exhibition, thank you so much to artists Adrianne Semmens and Jennifer Eadie for creating this exhibition and performances. We’re going to have a chat about your practices and some of the themes you have explored in this exhibition.

Lets start with hearing a little bit about yourselves, and how you came to begin this collaboration?

A&J—Jen and I thank The Mill for bringing us together – Katrina the Director of The Mill introduced us in 2019 whilst Jen was Writer in Residence and I was the Engage Program recipient. We discovered a shared interest and connection with each other’s work, which led to a first project, creating a text together for Delving into Dance/Critical Path Commission (2020). We were then eager to explore how the text’s dialogue could be explored and presented across our disciplines and were fortunate to undertake a Breakout Residency at The Mill (2020/21). The residency allowed for a creative development and exploration of text, movement, and installation, this in turn led to our collaboration on this exhibition.

A— I am a dance practitioner and descend from the Barkindji People of NSW. I enjoy working across performance, choreographic and dance education roles. Connection to place continues to be a central theme of my practice, explored in this collaboration and my own choreographic works: https://www.adriannesemmens.com/

J— I am an artist, writer, and academic currently living on Kaurna Country. I grew up on Taribelang Bunda Country. My creative work is interdisciplinary (text, installation, and performance), but always grounded in place: exploring the stories, bodies, and histories that emerge from place when it is recognized as living country rather than property or resource. Methodologically, my practice involves collating and then responding to site-based material. This material may take the form of text, bodies, archives, natural and man-made objects, textiles, recordings, and/or image: https://jennifereadie.cargo.site/

Adele: Place, belonging, and connection are key themes in the exhibition, and you have both taken personal journeys in order to present work that is considered and vulnerable, and opens a conversation for audiences to do the same. Can you tell us a little about how you came to this theme and what meaning it holds for both of you?

A— we connected through our discussions of place, belonging and connection. At the time of our connection I was considering my own relationship to place, having returned to Adelaide to make this my home, treading lightly and respectfully on Kaurna Country whilst acknowledging my pull and yearning for time and deeper connections to ancestral country.

J—I had only just moved to Adelaide-Kaurna country when we first met so I was still finding my feet here and was also in the process of tracing my heritage and encountering difficulties gaining any clarity about my ancestry. So, I was experiencing a sort of double dis-connection to place in this regard. It became obvious very quickly that we both recognized place and our relationship with it as central to our practice. From the beginning then, we have always understood and respected this shared vulnerability as point from which we create work together.

Adele: Creating a non-hierarchical collaborative relationship has been such an important focus of your work here. I wondered if you could both speak a bit about why that has been something that you have valued, and what things you have put in place to achieve it?

A— We respect and admire each other’s work and placed an emphasis throughout our collaboration to ensure our practice and individual disciplines initially sit together and in this project begin to entwine. I am really grateful for the new possibilities and mediums to present my work, opportunity for risks and extensive development that our ongoing collaboration has allowed for.

J—Yes, like Adrianne said, as a gesture of respect, our interest was in creating an exhibition that embodied both of our practices (text, art, and movement). Bringing different disciplines together means you see things in unexpected or new ways. We are both drawn to natural material and the aesthetic that emerges when one places the body in relation to that material – so this shared interest is what guided us. Both of us are honest and non-judgemental which removes the awkward diplomacy that can sometimes characterise collaboration.

Adele: Can you each speak about the materials that you have brought into the space and how you have worked with them? And about the relationship between material, body and place.

J&A—The exhibition is grounded by natural elements and textiles as a gesture, hands outwards, continuing lineage to country.

A— Our interest in material began during our residency, eager to use the fabric to designate a space/place. We experimented with cloth to depict our care of place, fragility and lineage. For this exhibition and our focus on our relationship to our current homes, here on Kaurna Yarta, I was interested in using the beautiful feather spear grass in my front yard.

J—The materials are our means of exploring the questions that inform our work: ‘what if authentic relationship to place is an act of opening that fractures a stable sense of identity’ and; ‘what tensions that arise when we, with mixed heritage, attempt to articulate a sense of connection or belonging to land that is not our ancestral country.’ UNRAVEL responds to these questions indirectly, as a means of acknowledging the difficulty of not being able to articulate a resolute response. We decided to explore the question via our connection with the natural environment where we live – in my case that with the False Caper plants that grow in the sand dunes across from where I live and for Adrianne, it was the spear grass that grows in her yard.

Photographs to each other when we had decided on the plant we would focus on for the exhibition:

The sculptures were a means of imbuing-returning a sort of energy back into the plants as a gesture of respect and care for being part of our process.  For the images – we wanted to create a dynamic where the plant and our body are in dialogue, as a means of breaking down borders between us and country:

Early work-in-progress images:

Adele: Text sits in the exhibition space in the form of mono prints and an artist statement, and also in the catalogue which you have both contributed writing to. I’d love to know a bit about the process of forming these works, and how you worked together on them.

J— I wrote the poem in the artist statement after first meeting Adrianne, as a means of trying to articulate what I felt was our shared experience – a sense of unravelling that occurs when one tries to articulate identity or connection to place. The description and poems that are included in the ‘accompanying text’ and monoprints were our attempt to authentically engage with Kaurna country via those singular plants who form part of our home: what is their history, what have they witnessed, if we were to have a yarn with them, how would it go? The monoprints are these ‘love letters’ in printed form:

A— Our text is a continuation of our ongoing dialogue, sharing thoughts, posing questioning, refining ideas. I appreciated Jen’s lead in our creation of text and the opportunity to explore my own writing through this process, each writing a poem and presenting it as a mono print. This was a new experience and presentation of my work, enabled through the support and sharing of Jen.

Thank you’s and good byes!

J&A – we would like to thank The Mill again for giving us the space and care to create our exhibition and for everyone who has gotten in touch with feedback. We would also like to thank Rosemary Wanganeen again for welcoming us to her country and for her words in conversations since, which carry such immense strength and kindness.

dance launchpad, public program, emerging producer 2022

Dance Launchpad 2022

Photo: Chris Herzfeld.

Dance Launchpad 2022

When: Friday, May 20, 7pm; Saturday, May 21, 3pm and 7pm

Duration: 45 minutes

Where: The Odeon Theatre, 57a Queen St, Norwood

Cost: $18 (+ booking fee)


Presented by The Mill, supported by Venue Partner ADT, Dance Launchpad is a professional development program designed to support emerging dancers to build experience in the professional industry.

The program nurtures the ecology of dance in SA by commissioning established SA choreographers to make new work, and share their industry knowledge with emerging SA dance artists.

Dance Launchpad 2022 is a contemporary dance double bill by choreographers Amanda Phillips and Tobiah Booth-Remmers performed by four emerging dancers Jess Minas, Isobel Stolinski, Amelia Walmsley and Amelia Watson, presented at ADT’s Odeon Theatre in May 2022.


Work 1:

Loom is a new dance work about the forces that drive us, directed by Amanda Phillips.

Loom is layered with both the impact of an irrepressible pull and desire, and the dread and knowing that follows or predicts our destination. On this pathway, it’s the shadows we can’t shake or the belief systems that are ingrained, or the disease/s we face or live with – that are ever present. We all have something looming or deep set inside us, which is part of us. The work aims to explore this terrain - the interplay of paying attention to the things that define us, or control us, or conversely to release and find a freedom in being: carried by these forces. How are we controlled? Is it a choice? Does what is looming, define us?

Loom is about what walks with us, follows us, hangs over us and what we carry within.

Composer: Alexander Waite Mitchell


Work 2:

Semblance will revolve around ideas of seething, subtlety and singularity, directed by Tobiah Booth-Remmers. These will be the starting points that the dancers will jump off from, diving into movement research that seeks strong imagery and poignant moments within these ideas.

In general, Tobiah is interested in work that explores humanity and relationships to each other and ourselves. He likes to use a combination of movement, imagery and moments to create a world or atmosphere that an audience can fall into and inhabit for a time. Semblance will continue this line of research and creativity.

Videographer: Peter Drew

Lighting designer: Aaron Herczeg


About the artists:

Photo: Chris Herzfeld.


This project has support from