Come Alive
at the National Museum of Australia. Artistic Director, Peter Wilkins;
Manager, Mitch Preston, NMA Learning Services and Community Outreach.
October 28 – November 1, 2013.
Commentary by Frank McKone
This is the fourth annual Come Alive
festival in which nine Canberra schools present 11 performances written
and performed by students based on their observations of exhibits
currently on display in the National Museum of Australia.
The
festival is an initiative taken under the Museum’s keen interest in
IMTAL, the International Museum Theatre Alliance, whose annual
conference has just been held at the Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, described (pre-conference) as follows:
The
2013 IMTAL Global Conference will focus on creativity and innovation in
today’s Museum Theatre. In 2013, Museum Theatre is a proven, tested,
educational approach in the field of museum studies. It is also an art
form bringing the best of performance to museum visitors of all ages.
But how is the field continuing to evolve? The 2013 Global conference
will bring together practitioners, researchers, performers, and museum
professionals from around the world to discuss, debate, present, and
share examples of how the field is evolving and innovating.
http://www.imtal.org/Default.aspx?pageId=1329539&eventId=546003&EventViewMode=EventDetails
As
far as I know, Wilkins’ approach at the NMA is rare, if not unique. He
combines the learning about Australia’s social history with the
learning of the practice of theatre by putting the students in the
position of researchers, writers and performers.
In
one show I saw today (October 30), Melrose High School took up the
question of whether each of three women whose stories are on display –
Holocaust survivor Olga Horak, Annette Kellerman who was the first woman
to swim the English Channel and stood up for women’s rights early in
the last century, and Ida Prosser-Fenn, a missionary and nurse in Papua
New Guinea through the 1940s and 50s – should be allowed into heaven.
The last laugh on the gatekeeper (a woman, not St Peter) was that all
had satisfied Heaven’s requirements – but Olga Horak is still alive,
volunteering at the Jewish Museum in Sydney. So they promised she would
be let in when she dies. Their play is called The Final Reward.
Canberra College students took an entirely different angle. The
Saw Doctor’s wagon was the mobile home and workshop of Harold Wright,
who started travelling the roads of rural Australia during the 1930s
Depression. After migrating from England to Australia in 1930, Wright
began walking Queensland roads to find work. In 1935, he used the little
money he had saved to convert a horsedrawn wagon into a combined
workshop and home. Over the next 34 years, as he travelled throughout
the farmlands and towns of north-west Victoria and New South Wales
sharpening knives and blades, Wright made updates and changes to his
wagon, promoting himself as ‘The Saw Doctor’.
[http://www.nma.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0010/353629/Museum_Issue2_Sep2012_Well-travelled.pdf]
Instead
of re-telling the story of Harold Wright, the students turned him into
“Tinker Tom” whose tractor and wagon became a time-travel machine to
take an audience of second and third-graders back to the 1956 Melbourne
Olympics and one of the first outside television broadcasts in
Australia, to the burning of their mining licences by the gold diggers
at the Eureka Stockade, to the convict days of the female factory, and
even back to the era of the dinosaurs. Humorous and even quite
absurdist, Tinker Tom’s Travels will go into primary schools and
I’m sure will succeed in its prime purpose of engendering a sense of
history through the fun of time travel.
There’s no
doubt in my mind that these examples show that Peter Wilkins succeeds in
encouraging the creativity and innovation that IMTAL seeks. But it
struck me watching today that there is a further level of education
going on here. The young people participating in museum theatre are
engaged in the very multicultural life which the National Museum
encapsulates as the core of life in Australia. Writing and performing
their own plays takes the students out of their personal circumstances,
and perhaps out of their assumptions, into the lives of a great variety
of people across the country and across time. Within the groups
performing today the variety of cultures in our society was clearly
represented, all working together to explore their Australian heritage –
and watching other groups from other schools travelling a similar
journey.
So I see Come Alive not so much about learning about history, but being history through drama. It was, perhaps, the Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner, famous for his Seven Intelligences, who first established the importance of education through museums. Come Alive, I suggest, is proof in action.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
No comments:
Post a Comment