hipflask – Page 5

Little Wing Collective Creative Conference

How vibrant has Perth become lately thanks to the countless artists, photographers, promoters, performers, musicians, actors and dancers etc. doing their thing?

We’re spoilt for choice every night of the week with events and venues alive with the fruits of these local creatives.

Not only have we noticed, but so have the guys at the Little Wing Collective and lucky for you (& us) they’ve organised a Creative Conference with 12 creative industry professionals ( inc. Jarrad Seng, Bob Gordon (X-Press) and Aaron Rutter (JumpClimb) to name a few) sharing their unique experiences, advice and challenges that they have faced in their chosen creative field.

Running for 4 nights a week starting on the 14th of March, this event will wrap up with an afterparty on the Friday (ps. pizza and beer available all nights), with tickets starting at only $5 we recommend RSVPing as soon as possible!

To RSVP click here and for the Facebook event click here.

Proudly supported by Hipflask .x

New Video: Methyl Ethel

Methyl Ethel are on the cusp of cracking the international market following their recent signing to label 4AD , so its getting harder to catch them at little intimate gigs around town these days – but they’re still there if you keep an eye out…

Yesterday they launched the music video to ‘Idée Fixe,’, the opening track from ‘Oh Inhuman Spectacle,’ their album self-described as “poltergeist infomercials between your sleepisodes.”

Ah yeah.

idée fixe
ˌiːdeɪ ˈfiːks/
noun
an idea or desire that dominates the mind; an obsession.

New Venue: Alt.

FRONTtextweb

Well well well, Freo seems to be providing the goods lately in the way of new venues, and this ones having a killa party on Friday night, so chuck it in your diary.

Alt. is built from an old storage section of Metropolis Fremantle and focuses on alternative and experimental hip-hop and house.

It’s a combination of a grimy warehouse with extremely over-the-top production for such a small room – a total sensory overload – and a welcoming family in a laneway smoking area with plenty of seating, a shisha and cute lights.

Friendly folk Daniela and Nik run it – two friends who met on Tinder and bonded over weird music and a need to find welcoming places to party at, something I think we can all appreciate.

 

Zaerën Momand

Image thnx to Driely S

As you know, we like to do things differently here at Hipflask HQ, so we’ve done a 360 and interviewed the interviewee (does that make sense? I think it does).

Avenoir, a Perth local publication, is quickly gaining momentum and a reputation as a respected source of information on a whole range of topics – from society and culture to all things creative.
Behind it is the highly intellectual and beautiful (inside and out) individual, Zaerën Momand.
Do yourself a favour and get yourself acquainted.

What drove you to create your own publication?
Rebellion haha. At first I had a naive notion that I could write the way I wanted to and that I would just report whatever matters most. But after seeing how journalism rids that creativity due to their triangle paradigm of “objectivity”, I wasn’t willing to give up my way of writing. So instead of catering to the Editor’s imaginary audience expectations of my work, I decided to create my own magazine.

Avenoir has the aim to ‘challenge cultural norms of society, whilst embracing the creative art form.’ How do you do this?
I have the writers to challenge what the media or press are saying about a person, place, thing or event. The reason is because we are too quick to accept the news as fact when the story changes and things go in tangents; and details that may be found through other sources of what the mainstream media is distracting us from, i.e. Kardashian antics over the TPP.
We are having each department in collaboration with like-minded individuals/creative communities (such as Revelation Film Festival to Doctors Without Borders) who we can expand together on and hopefully be able to make a difference.

Concentrating on all things local, national and international – which region receives the most love from readers?
At the moment we are still building our audience but we are focusing on our Perth community in covering shows and festivals and things to do in Perth. We tend to focus on international and national news, but cover things local. I work with people from the East Coast and as well in America which I’m hoping to expand to later on.

How is doing what your doing in Perth different to other areas? What are the limitations/challenges you face… as well as the easy stuff.
What I noticed as an American having lived in both hemispheres is that it’s all about the hype in America; achieving the aesthetic, fulfilling the materialist needs and what is “in” at the moment. While in Perth it’s not like that. All it is for Perth is showing the people there are things to do in WA, when most believe there isn’t anything to do at all. For some reason there isn’t that strong reinforcement to keep Perth content with what it has because the people have been told countless of times that they are isolated, which in turn has been programmed within their minds to persist in that belief.

What’s up next?
We’ve got a new system in place so we’re hoping to be able to cater to our audience with a balance of social issues, music, film, fashion, the arts, and so forth. As well our collaboration with Canopy Films, who are our go-to film crew in creating visuals for our work at Avenoir, and working with hipflask on upcoming events.

What do you personally recommend we check out?
Ever since having seen the photos taken by Driely S of the Afro-Punk festival (and feeling honoured to have her work grace our first ever issue) I couldn’t help but appraise the mindset of culture. See, it’s all about appreciating the art and acknowledging where it comes from, but most importantly to understand the struggles and accomplishments of that particular group or culture. But in regards to Afro-Punk, the history of punk music that originally came from reggae had been completely white-washed by the Oi movement. So what Driely S does is project the culture that has been ridden by the movement into the forefront and in turn capturing the mindset of the people who are free in their individuality and together in their ancestry.

If people wish to be contributors, what is the best way to be a successful candidate?
Those who are able to bring an interesting perspective to their work; whether formal or satire. As long as their intentions are to open the minds of the masses, challenge cultural norms, and are familiar with the creative art form of the cult/mainstream in film, arts, music, etc, would be successful candidates in writing for Avenoir Magazine

+ final last words…
You can mock me for sounding all Sartre, but I really believe you are valued by the the meaning that you choose in life, and that in itself becomes existent and reflected to everyone around you, but only when you decide to act on it with pure intention.

Yup. 

Success

Woohoo, new venue alert!

Success is a new platform for contemporary art in the heart of Freo, brought to you by the team behind the Moana Project Space in the CBD.
It has transformed an abandoned basement of a vacated department store into a multi-gallery exhibition space, presenting cutting-edge visual art and performance from international and local artists.

Things kick off this Saturday afternoon with four simultaneous exhibitions across 2800 square metres of gallery space…

Gallery One/No Confidence, an international survey of new audio-visual art examining today’s political culture.
Gallery Two/At the Equinox, by Melbourne artist Emma Hamilton in her first west-coast solo show she has produced a series of sculptural photographic works considering the interrelation of time, perception, and landscape.
Gallery Three/Wilderness Tasks, a new selected exhibition examining contemporary artists alternatively romantic and adversarial relationship with the natural environment.
Gallery Four/Music, a curated performance program with a night of live music from Josten Myburgh Octet, Petros Vouris, Hysperia (Mei Saraswati), DJ Tourist Kid, as well as a site-speci c audio-visual installation from Chris Cobilis.

Their art and performance programme will continue throughout 2016, with further openings in April and June so keep an eye out for details on the app.

Success opens to the public 6pm Saturday 20 February 2016. If you would like to attend please RSVP to info@successarts.org.