Organisation Profile: Branch Nebula

Air Time by Branch Nebula
(c)Alex Davies

Do you believe that performance/art can change people’s hearts and minds?
When people experience a form they’ve not encountered before, they must adapt; they shift the paradigms they are currently working with. When the form is familiar, but the content is different, there is not much adapting required. For example, a play is a familiar form, it is literary based, with actors reciting the text. What they are saying varies but the framework is something we understand. Hence our interest is in new forms and ways of presenting our ideas. As artists we feel compelled to challenge and offer new ways of experiencing performance.
What is your next challenge?
In June, Lee and Mirabelle will be travelling up to Yirrkala, Arnhem Land to meet with lead Indigenous artist Rosealee Pearson-Grimes for a period of community consultation and research, with a focus on setting up a new collaboration for a street style project with the local Indigenous community there. Nhulunbuy on Yolngu country is Lee’s hometown and he’s had a long held dream to develop a project that employs local talent and a platform for the strong cultural energies existing there.
Article by Tamara Winikoff
Tamara Winikoff is an independent consultant with extensive experience in arts advocacy, policy, and cultural leadership. She was a a founding member of the Inner West Creative Network and served as Executive Director of the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) for 22 years, championing artists’ rights and sector development. As Co-convenor of ArtsPeak, she coordinated national arts policy initiatives. Previously, she managed the Community, Environment, Art and Design (CEAD) program at the Australia Council for the Arts and lectured in Cultural Environment and Heritage at Macquarie University. Based in Sydney, she continues to influence the cultural landscape through strategic consultancy.