Video
Interviewees:
Susan Milne and Greg Stonehouse
Interviewer:
Noelene Pullen (Development Officer-Local Studies for The Hills Shire
Library Service)
Date of Interview:
1 Dec 2009
Transcription:
Glenys Murray, Dec 2009
Noelene:
The site chosen by The Hills Shire Council for its public art was Castle
Grand, which is on the corner of Castle and Pennant Streets in Castle
Hill. The building houses Castle Hill Library, the Castle Hill Community
Centre with its function rooms and the Castle Hill Early Childhood Health
Centre. The site is a meeting place, a place where the community can come
together to chat, explore, communicate, learn. Just be part of a cultural
hub. The activities in the Castle Hill Library allow people to find information,
learn more, participate in various programmes and activities and learn
a sense of community and identity.
 |
|
Children reading in Castle Hill Library |
The Castle Hill Water Wall was officially
launched on 21 September 2009. It includes images and words reflecting the history of the idea
of community in the Hills Shire. There’s a Parish Map of Castle Hill showing neighbouring original
land holders and photos of cultural activities, local churches where the community met regularly
and early transport enabling communication, such as the horse and cart, early motor car and steam
tram which was achieved by the community in the early twentieth century through successful long-term
lobbying.
The Water
Wall also includes some Aboriginal Darug words approved by Darug man Richard
Green that represent the concept of community. They include a word for
“let’s talk” and also “let’s all walk together”.
|
tulla
mulla - white man
dullai
- aboriginal man
byala
- let's talk (present tense)
dalang
- tongue (as in language)
yanna
lybilya - let's walk together
|
|
Council accepted the tender of
Milne and Stonehouse to undertake the public art at Castle Grand.
Greg: There are many
types of public art. There’s even computer digital art, there’s outdoor sculptural art that only
appears for a couple of weeks. It encompasses a broad spectrum of art performance activity. For
The Hills Shire this public art work engages with the public 24/7 really. At night time when the
lights shine through the glass and the water, you get a different effect to the day time, where
the ripples of the water will be magnified by sunlight. The way Susan and I have approached public
art as artists and arrived at this point in our practice is quite different. I became an artist
a little bit later in my twenties. I have always juggled it like most artists with trying to make
some money and be creative.
 |
|
Susan Milne
and Greg Stonehouse
|
Susan:
I feel quite fortunate because I always knew that I wanted to be an artist.
So it was a natural progression to move from a gallery artist through
to an installation artist to public art. At the moment we still do the
whole three of those but the public art is our main driver and we mostly
work on public art within public spaces.
I think one of the more exciting
aspects of working in the public domain is the collaborative process. (Examples of Milne and
Stonehouse public art include the Elizabeth Street Footbridge Parramatta and Float at The Ponds.
Images of these can be found in the above video.) Greg and I enjoy working on projects together
and also collaborating with other professionals like you hearing the stories and all the historical
references but also working with engineers and lighting designers and architects and planners.
Greg: We were invited
to submit an expression of interest with a number of other artists and we were successful in going
to that next stage. At that point Stuart who was the Cultural Officer suggested quite strongly
to us to make this work really local, to embed it within the character of The Hills Shire. That
was an interesting challenge to be put to us with this and therefore it was obvious that we had
to go and talk to you about what was part of that cultural psyche at The Hills. We're in a library
and all round the world libraries are in a state of flux, because where they were the holders
of knowledge and the archives of knowledge,
 |
|
Garthowen -
built on the ridge line at Castle Hill
|
now they are the portal, they’re
social activity, there’s a coffee shop, there’s a lot more interesting CD’s and information has
an E in front of it, knowledge has an E in front of it. So they’re interesting places. So we thought
oh well the illuminated manuscript becomes this strange doorway into it. Then we got our friend
who writes computer code to do an algorithm for reading. It was a paradox. It was ironic because
reading is such an imaginative discovery.
The sense
of character that we explored with Noelene was about the physical space
along the ridge lines and that sense of being above the plains. It was
interesting to talk about the character of the people. The strong sense
of Christian idealism, compassion and that was explored as Noelene pointed
out in a number of homes and places where the less fortunate were given
that kind of education and help and nourishment.
Susan:
I think the other thing that is really important, it’s fantastic to have
all the historical and all the referencing to the community but it’s also
really important to bring it into a contemporary art piece and to make
it relevant right now and hopefully grow with that sense of being a contemporary
piece. So it’s about having the many layers including the new and the
future in it as well. I think one of the ways with this work and particularly
the illuminated wall art piece that’s going to go in is the use of the
technologies used to develop the art work and also the use of lighting
and water as almost the active part of the artwork and changing it from
a day to a night piece.
 |
|
Installing
the Water Wall |
Greg: These processes
for glass making were slumping the glass so that the letters would form as the glass became slightly
liquid it forms around some of the letters. We sand blasted so some of the old maps of the area
are sand blasted pieces. There’s a rust inlay to add another layer so there’s almost three layers.
It's toughened and put together and inserted behind the water. So the work is really quite interesting
in that process. Hence what happens to the imagery from the design sense where it’s all very apparent
and visible. You can search and find some of the architectural remnants and the text and when it’s
all done and formed into the glass and the material takes over, then the work becomes a lot more
of a discovery and people can see the little bits of it. Then the website and the Library becomes
much more important because then the people use the artwork as a portal to the understanding of
local history and the local culture and identity.