MoMA in Melbourne


The exhibition forces you to question the real impact of famous artworks in the flesh. 






Promising to bring the magic of the iconic Museum of Modern Art from New York to Melbourne is no small feat, and one that could easily have fallen short of expectations.

Opening on June 9th, the National Gallery of Victoria’s ‘MoMA at the NGV, 130 Years of Modern and Contemporary Art’ features around 150 works transported from the States, many of which have never been seen before in Australia. MoMA is renowned worldwide for its unparalleled collection of artworks from the seminal moments in modern art. From the most recognisable Pop Art pieces to priceless Cubist works, it has long been understood that MoMA is the place to visit for modern art enthusiasts. Finally Australian art lovers were promised an insight into this collection.  The queues snaking back from the exhibition entrance prove just how exciting this concept is.

Outside the National Gallery of Victoria

Displayed chronologically, the exhibition begins in the early 1900s with the likes of Futurist artist Umberto Boccioni. A piece so involved with concepts of fluidity through air and multi-dimensional movement, his 1913 sculpture Unique Forms of Continuity in Space can only fully be appreciated in person. Being able to view it from every possible angle, walking around it, experiencing it how it was intended, is evidence enough for the importance of the travel of MoMA’s collection. 





Boccioni, Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, 1913




Arguably some of the most famous pieces, and ones that will surely draw the most foot-traffic include Mondrian’s Composition in Red, Blue, and Yellow, Dali’s The Persistence of Memory, and Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Diptych. With artworks such as these, which have been mass-produced in so many forms, it is quite surreal – no pun intended- to see the originals in the flesh, up close. For example, it is shocking how small Dali’s piece is when it has made such an impact on visual culture, reproduced as 3D clocks, tattoos and graffiti. Seeing it in the flesh, you are forced to look at it for what it actually is, a small oil painting, rather than the legacy it has left in pop culture.

With De Chirico, The Melancholy of Departure, 1914 

Perhaps that is really the great theme of this exhibition, questioning the real impact of famous artworks in the flesh. These are pieces that rarely leave the walls of their New York museum, and therefore are most commonly experienced through reproductions or through a screen. Seeing them, transported across oceans, viewers must question how their meanings change when experienced in reality. How does the size and texture of Claes Oldenburg’s fan become eroticised when seen up close? How does the impact of Martha Rosler’s iconic feminist Semiotics of the Kitchen change when seen on a 1970s TV screen? How do Mark Rothko’s huge blocks of colour develop new shapes and depth when viewed with your own eyes rather than a camera’s?

The display of Martha Rosler's Semiotics of the Kitchen, 1975

The success of the NGV’s collaboration will surely have an impact on how modern art is experienced in Australia for years to come.


MoMA at the NGV is at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne until 7th October 2018. 

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3 Days in Cairns

 Fish have whole other respiratory organs to do what we are doing with a plastic tube

The trip didn't start too well. Our flight from Melbourne was at 7, so, of course I woke up at 3am panicking we wouldn't make it. Leaving Camilla sleeping, I ordered an extortionately priced Uber to the airport at 4am. My Uber driver was actually from Cairns and we had a great chat about his home town. But then he asked "so when's your flight? 5.30?" But nope, Mr Uberman, you have clearly underestimated my travel anxiety. Yep, I decided to leave 3 hours wiggle room for a domestic flight. 

Anyway after meeting up with Camilla when she arrived at the airport at 5.30 like a normal person, we were off.

Embracing our first rays of sun after escaping the rain in Melbourne 
We stayed at Gilligan's, which is known as the party hostel. Never having stayed in a hostel (always been more of an overpacked-suitcaser than a backpacker), I had very low expectations. I was picturing rodents and bugs everywhere, with pick pockets hiding under your bed and people having sex behind every corner.

Home Sweet Home 

I was pleasantly surprised. Although Gilligan's is above an incredibly trashy club (think Blurred Lines playing during a wet t-shirt competition, a casino attached to the main room, and a Bingo Lingo so sexist it puts England's to shame), it was actually pretty clean and had a really friendly atmosphere.

We also used Gilligan's travel agency to help plan and book our day trips. For our first day we went to the Great Barrier Reef with Passions of Paradise (not as telenovela as it sounds). The journey there was very choppy, with Camilla and I clinging desperately to our benches. Greta spent the journey bouncing around saying she could spend a year on that boat, to which I said I'd pass, thanks v much.

Shout out to Greta embracing Moana vibes, whilst I tried not to vom. 
When we finally got to the reef it was stunning. We stopped at two spots to get in and snorkel. I've snorkelled once before in Israel where I got so distracted by the fish that I put the whole snorkel underwater, breathed in and got a mouth full of sea water. In my defence, snorkelling is a super weird experience!! Your whole life you swim holding your breath and being aware that you'll have to resurface soonish to get air. Then suddenly boom, you're told 'forget all that- it's all good, breathe normally in the middle of the ocean surrounded by fish that actually have whole other respiratory organs to do what we are doing with a plastic tube.'

Looks like I'm posing but this is genuinely me trying not to get face whipped by my hair in the wind 
Luckily, I chilled out after a bit and got the hang of it and managed to get a great view of one of the 7 natural wonders of the world. The water was amazingly clear and was a perfect temperature the day we went. The coral was maybe a bit of a duller colour than you'd see in pictures but the fish were actually much brighter than I'd expected. We also spotted a few turtles, reef sharks and sting rays, but I must say I did a hasty doggy paddle away whenever the bigger fish got a smidge too close.

Let's just ignore that I'm wearing a float belt... 
(Also shout out to the Passions crew who unexpectedly stopped twice on the way back. First to rescue a small boat that had run out of fuel and then to pick up a huge piece of plastic floating in the water. Not all heroes wear capes, folks.)



The next day trip was to rainforests and waterfalls around Cairns. The tour was run by Uncle Brians and our guide was Sid. We were in a group of about 12 people, all traveling in our 20s which was a really nice crew.

This lake has a crocodile in it who supposedly doesn't eat humans but I decided to not take that plunge...
Sid showed us around, simultaneously being entertaining and terrifying, showing us all the many things that can kill you in Queensland, like the Wait-a-while tree, so named because of its tiny spikes hooking into your skin meaning you'll have to wait a while to get out.

Thanks for capturing this attempt at a dive that turned into a face plant 

Sid was also helpfully around to snap photos of me falling, slipping and generally embarrassing myself at various moments int he trip, thanks for that. 

This helpful Nemo preserves a smidge of my dignity whilst showing this stunning facial expression
One of the highlights was definitely Josephine Falls which has such smooth rocks on the waterfall that you can slide right down it. Despite both Greta and I bruising our bums in the process, it was still amazing.

Tips for anyone considering doing this trip--- bring extra clothes and good towel!!! The water was pretty damn cold in some places and, spoiler alert, a $9 piece of fabric disguised as a towel will be completely useless.

"Quick, it's Golden Hour!!" 
After the aforementioned bruises and doggy paddling, we were pretty exhausted on day 3 and took a well deserved break for sunbathing. (Yet another spoiler alert for readers back home, drumroll please... I failed at tanning. I have potentially become paler.)

Amazing food (and aesthetic, obvs) at Lafew Cafe & Kombucha Bar

Our last night out was at Woolshed. Sorry Gilligan's, we love you, but Woolies is the better club. But of course, all nights could always be improved by a lil bit of sexist bingo.

Free drinks from Gilligan's... alas, not enough to make us enter the wet t-shirt contest

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