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Please join us for the fourth edition of VHS Tracking Presents – Goolugatup's shiny new film club ☆☆☆The program invites local artists to present a wide-ranging selection of art films, classics, and new wave cinema. Curated by iconic Boorloo film critic Tristan Fidler, the creator of the celebrated local VHS Tracking film zine, and hosted by Goolugatup gallery monthly on Wednesday nights.
In this edition, artist Cass Lynch will be presenting a screening of Pan's Labyrinth (2006) available on Kanopy.
Doors 6:30pm | Starts 7:00pm.
FREE admittance, full bar, free popcorn, feel free to byo snacks.
Seats limited - RSVP to ensure your spot.
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Cass Lynch is a Koreng Wudjari Noongar woman, and is descended from the families of Ravensthorpe in the Great Southern region of Western Australia. She is a writer and Research Fellow, and has a PhD in Creative Writing that explores Noongar stories that reference climate change. She is a member of the Wirlomin Noongar Language and Stories group who focus on the revitalisation of culture and language connected to south coast Noongar people. She is the co-founder of Aboriginal literature project Woylie Project, which facilitates bringing Noongar stories into print and training community members to be presenters. She has published short stories, essays, and poems, and her multimedia storytelling works have been featured at Perth Festival, Fremantle Biennale, PICA, Arts House Melbourne, CCA Glasgow, and more. Her Noongar language haikus, published in Westerly 64.1, won the 2019 Patricia Hackett Prize. Her short story ‘Split’, a creative impression of deep time Perth, is a key text for high school students studying VCE English in Victoria and can be found in the UQP publication Flock: First Nations Stories Then and Now.
Cass Lynch is represented by Benython Oldfield at Zeitgeist Agency.
☆☆☆
Goolugatup Heathcote is a cultural precinct located on the shores of the Derbal Yerrigan, in the suburb of Applecross, just south of the centre of Boorloo Perth, WA.
The precinct's street address is 58 Duncraig Rd, Applecross WA. It is 10 minute drive from the CBD, with ample parking on site. The closest train station is Canning Bridge, and the closest bus route the 148.
The project space, where the film screening is held, is wheelchair accessible through rear access. ACROD parking is available nearby. Main entry is 1.4m wide, and accessible toilet doors are 0.9m wide. Toilets are unisex.
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays
58-60 Duncraig Road, Applecross, WA, Australia, Western Australia 6153, 58 Duncraig Rd, Applecross WA 6153, Australia,Perth, Western Australia
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