NGA Play
Sally Smart

Opens Saturday 10 November 2018

Sally Smart Staging the Studio (The Choreography of Cutting) Performer Brooke Stamp 2017, installation view, studio. Photo credit: Gregory Lorenzutti.


Sally Smart has long been fascinated and inspired by the Ballets Russes, the avant-garde phenomenon where great artists, composers and choreographers came together in the early years of the twentieth century to create magical experiences that stunned and entranced audiences. The National Gallery of Australia has one of the world’s great collections of Ballets Russes costumes.

Sally Smart has been working on a project that recasts the Ballets Russes, reimagining and embodying a discourse between the historical and contemporary avant-garde, for her NGA Play installation she shares some of that work.

Sally Smart invites you to enter a Ballets Russes inspired world of colourful cut-out assemblages and activities. Create your own costumes and headwear before stepping into your own performance, dancing alongside projections of Brooke Stamp who has responded to the original dances with her own dance improvisation. The space will also unfold to reveal immersive places to create your own narratives in pencil and felt, blackboard activities and paper construction.

Public Programs

Art for lunch with Sally Smart
Thursday 8 November | 12.45pm

Sally Smart talks about her NGA Play installation and arts practice           

Opening performance
Saturday 10 November | 11.00am
all ages, children to be accompanied

Join Sally Smart for the opening celebration, with an interactive dance performance featuring collaborating dancer Brooke Stamp and inspired by the Ballet Russes.

Choreography of the Seasons
Every Saturday 4–5pm during school terms only

Join an informal session to learn a few simple dance steps from some of the most loved performances of the legendary Ballet Russes.

See What's On for Kids and Families

 

 

Banner image: Sally Smart Staging the Studio (The Choreography of Cutting) Performer Brooke Stamp 2017, installation view Margaret Lawrence Gallery, VCA University of Melbourne, Melbourne. Photo: Jeff Busby.