KCCG spokesman John Dalton explains the competition to onlookers in O’Neill Square

July 15, 2017

The Kingaroy Concerned Citizens Group launched its “385 Alive!” community art project on Friday afternoon, the latest salvo in its campaign to stop Moreton Resources from building an open-cut coal mine near Kingaroy.

The name comes from “MDL 385”, the mining development lease that Moreton has over part of the land.

“(The) project aims to celebrate and preserve images of some of our finest farmland in the event the Kingaroy coal mine actually goes ahead,” KCCG spokesman John Dalton told onlookers in O’Neill Square.

He said there were times when the best possible way to express things of beauty or of loss were through the arts.

“Art forms such as painting and sketching, photography, dance, poetry and song allow people to express things in a way that regular words and deeds do not. It also travels faster and further than words these days, thanks to social media,” he said.

“The name is combination of the mining development lease number, and a desire for the local land to be alive, productive and beautiful, and not a bleak black and white coal mine and pile of overburden that scars our land and injures our safe and reliable water resources forever.

“Also, should the mine go ahead, we wanted to ensure that the images and heritage of the area is secured somewhere, and not just in memories of those who have lived there.”

The 385 Alive! project has two parts: a series of workshops by well-known Queensland wildlife and landscape photographer Steve Parrish (funded via a $3450 grant from the South Burnett Regional Council’s RADF program), and an art competition with sections for people of all ages, using art, photography, dance, poetry or song.

St Mary’s Catholic College will host a workshop for students and a free public lecture on August 4, and a one-day photography workshop on August 5.

The college will also host a gallery of all entrants in the 385 Alive! competition and the awards ceremony on October 1.

Competition sponsors are Primary (St John’s Lutheran School), Secondary (Swickers), Open Sections 8-10 (Em’s Photo Phactory), Open Sections 11-13 (Kingaroy Observatory), Open Sections 14-16 (Steven and Janelle Reeves), Open Sections 17-19 (Kingaroy Observatory), Other Art Forms (Bethany Cottages), $500 Feature Photography Prize (Crumptons and PCA), and $500 Feature Art Prize (KCCG).

The “Other Art Forms” category includes three sections:

  • The Performance: Digitally record a performance (poem, dance or song) that expresses your views about the proposed coal mine (maximum 4 minutes on a USB stick).
  • The Doco: Produce a short documentary-style video that expresses your views about the proposed coal mine (maximum 4 minutes on a USB stick).
  • Indigenous Art: The mine site is a part of Wakka Wakka land and contains many native animals. Express the loss of this land to a mine site using Indigenous art forms (all entrants in this section must be Indigenous artists)

Details of all the competition categories and prizes can be downloaded here (1.76Mb PDF)

KCCG members with sponsors of the competition … back row, from left, John Bjelke-Petersen (Bethany Cottages), Sonie Crumpton (Crumptons), John Dalton (KCCG), St John’s Lutheran School Assistant to the Principal Jonathan Kotzur and Gary Tessmann (KCCG); middle row, Steve Magnussen (PCA), St Mary’s Catholic College principal Angela Myles and Cr Roz Frohloff (SBRC); front row, James Barclay (Kingaroy Observatory), Emma Tait (Em’s Photography Phactory), Deputy Mayor Kathy Duff and Rebecca Humphrey (Swickers)
Local landholders John Bjelke-Petersen and Damien O’Sullivan with Jonathan Kotzur (St John’s)
KCCG president Gary Tessmann said that the support for the art project was a commitment by sponsors to sustainable agriculture in the area

 

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