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What is it
For this year's annual Hugh D.T. Williamson Lecture, Science Gallery Melbourne is delighted to host Dr Paola Balla and Paola Morabito. Acclaimed Wemba-Wemba & Gunditjmara artist Dr Paola Balla and filmmaker Paola Morabito discuss their collaborative process as cousins and creators of the work Mok Mok Murrup Yakuwa, featured in the current SCI-FI: Mythologies Transformed exhibition at Science Gallery Melbourne. 
When
10/10/2024 6:00pm - 7:00pm
Where

Science Gallery Melbourne Theatre, Melbourne Connect, 700 Swanston Street

Free
Register here

Hugh D.T. Williamson Lecture 2024

For this year's annual Hugh D.T. Williamson Lecture, Science Gallery Melbourne is delighted to host Dr Paola Balla and Paola Morabito.

Acclaimed Wemba-Wemba & Gunditjmara artist Dr Paola Balla and filmmaker Paola Morabito discuss their collaborative process as cousins and creators of the work Mok Mok Murrup Yakuwa, featured in the current SCI-FI: Mythologies Transformed exhibition at Science Gallery Melbourne. 
Mok Mok Murrup Yakuwa is an immersive film installation referencing the Wemba Wemba story of Mok Mok – a spiritual woman entity and sovereign goddess, played by the artist’s mother Aunty Margie Tang. The work is symbolic of the power of country to heal, of matriarchal strength and resistance.     

Join the artists as they take us into the fertile ground of family, relational paradigms and how ‘mythologies’ can empower our strength and resistance and remind us of how old our sovereignty is. 

Mok Mok Murrup Yakuwa by Paola Balla and Paola Morabito was presented in 2023 in Shadow Spirit curated by Kimberley Moulton. Shadow Spirit was Produced and Commissioned by RISING with co-commissioning partner Illuminate Adelaide. 

This event is proudly supported by The Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation.  

About the speaker

Dr Paola Balla is a Wemba Wemba and Gunditjmara woman and acclaimed artist, writer curator and educator. She focuses on Aboriginal women's stories and resistance with a visual practice, encapsulating research, art, memory and narrative realms. Her work centres Aboriginal women’s voices, activism, Sovereignty, and matriarchy and First Nations ways of being, knowing and doing.

She has exhibited extensively over the last two decades including recent solo exhibition Disrupting Artistic Terra Nullius; the ways Aboriginal women speak blak and back, (PhD examination) (2019) Footscray Community Arts Centre and recent group shows include Wilam Biik, Tarra Warra Museum of Art, (2021), Sovereign Sisters: domestic work, (2021) Flinders University Museum of Art (FUMA), Art Gallery of South Australia’s Tarnanthi Festival, Affirmation, (2020) Koorie Heritage Trust, for PHOTO 2021.