Mercury (Hobart)

ALL THE BIG ACTS

Winter festival to celebrate arts that push the boundaries

- KANE YOUNG

DARK Mofo will again be the hottest ticket in town this June, with Hobart’s internatio­nally acclaimed midwinter festival returning with a packed program of Australian exclusive performanc­es, cutting-edge arts and music, and plenty of unexpected surprises. The award-winning festival will run from June 13-24, with the Murray and Liverpool streets region of the Hobart CBD to be transforme­d on Friday and Saturday nights into a new multivenue, late-night party precinct called Night Mass. There, more than 100 artists are set to perform amid a sprawling nocturnal neighbourh­ood of cocktail lounges, clubs and the Bang Bang Bar — Dark Mofo’s Twin Peaks- style David Lynch tribute venue. Legendary US artist, filmmaker, writer and musical maverick Laurie Anderson; Grammy award-winning songwriter and multi-instrument­alist St Vincent; Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq; and Crystal Castles co-founder Alice Glass headline this year’s musical program, which also features acts such as Einstürzen­de Neubauten, Rebekah del Rio, Jagwar Ma, Tiny Ruins and a special collaborat­ion between Archie Roach and Tiddas. Anders o n will also collaborat­e with Taiwanese new media artist Hsin-Chien Huang on the virtual reality experience Chalkroom; and present Lou Reed’s immersive “sound bath” installati­on Drones.

The Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery will team with Dark Mofo to present the new exhibition A Journey to Freedom; while the Salamanca Arts Centre will host Invisible House, “a frenzied celebratio­n of arcane knowledge, magic, science and the occult”.

The festival will also feature the Australian premiere of Foundation IHOS Amsterdam’s operatic work Backwards From Winter; a Victorian Opera/Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra production of tragic opera The Rape of Lucretia; and the physical theatre piece Animal, by Influx Theatre.

Dark Mofo favourites returning for another year include the ever-popular City of Hobart Winter Feast at PW1; the cheeky Nude Solstice Swim at Sandy Bay at sunrise on June 22; the Purging and Burning of the ogohogoh sculptures; and the Dark Park industrial art playground at Macquarie Point, which will this year feature Australian-exclusive large-scale interactiv­e works by US light artist Matthew Schreiber, London’s United Visual Artists collective, and more.

Dark Mofo has been expanded to include a new prelude weekend (June 7-11), featuring the two-day literature, film and ideas symposium Dark and Dangerous Thoughts; several exhibition openings; and the mysterious Société Anonyme masked costume ball at Hadley’s Orient Hotel.

Since it began in 2013, Dark Mofo has become the state’s biggest annual event, with more than 80,000 individual tickets sold last year.

Creative director Leigh Carmichael said the festival’s sixth line-up was its “most expansive” to date, featuring a total of 750 artists and 22 exhibition­s.

“The festival will showcase a powerhouse of headliners: Laurie Anderson, St. Vincent, Alice Glass and Tanya Tagaq, who will lead the way on our usual mix of extreme, experiment­al and eclectic programmin­g,” he said.

“It’s always difficult to know exactly how the festival will unfold for the audience.

“We just strive to try and find new ways to experience the darkness, and hope that people will continue to embrace it, and enjoy Hobart’s longest nights.”

Pre-sale tickets will be available to subscriber­s from 6pm Monday, before going on sale to the general public at 11am Tuesday.

For more details, go to www.darkmofo.net.au

We just strive to try and find new ways to experience the darkness, and hope that people will continue to embrace it.

LEIGH CARMICHAEL

 ?? FEATURED: Crystal Castles co-founder Alice Glass, left, and Polish metal band Batushka are among the musical acts for Dark Mofo. ??
FEATURED: Crystal Castles co-founder Alice Glass, left, and Polish metal band Batushka are among the musical acts for Dark Mofo.

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