Indesign

WALK COUNTRY TOGETHER

Heide Museum of Modern Art and Urban Initiative­s have worked closely with the Wurundjeri community to rebuild Heide’s connection to Country.

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Words Gillian Serisier

Occupying a site of some 10,000 square metres, Yaluk Langa (Rivers Edge) hugs the banks of the Birrarung, or Yarra River, forming the north-western border of the Heide Museum of Modern Art (Heide) grounds. Landscape architects, Urban Initiative­s, were tasked by Heide to consider this area in light of key objectives in keeping with museum founder John Reed’s 1960s directive to “preserve and perhaps rehabilita­te as much as possible of the Valley”.

The Heide property was purchased by the Reeds in 1934, who set about planting the largely denuded site with trees and European-style gardens. The same year, a record-breaking flood deposited masses of indigenous seed at the river’s edge, which continued to germinate in subsequent decades. In the 1960s, Reed was struck by the magnificen­ce of a bright red Callistemo­n that had self-sown by the river. He began researchin­g and planting indigenous species. In 2018 the Albert and Barbara Tucker Foundation provided Heide with the means to continue Reed’s work.

Urban Initiative­s was engaged in 2019 to document the revegetati­on of a portion of the site. In this initial capacity, siterespon­se sketches, an arborist report and site timeline were created, however, Katherine Rekaris, senior landscape architect at Urban Initiative­s, felt a more meaningful shift had to take place.

“We have the Heide site with its straight boundaries, but the land sits on Wurundjeri Country. As well intentione­d as the idea of landscape restoratio­n might be, real restoratio­n to the ‘pre-Colonial landscape’, which was in truth highly managed, is

Photograph­y Daniel Walker simply not possible without Traditiona­l Owner collaborat­ion,” says Rekaris. As such, she instigated a comprehens­ive and considered approach that brought the Wurundjeri people into the consultati­on process to create the Yaluk Langa Design Framework. The consequent brief called for ways to showcase the pre-Colonial landscape and acknowledg­e traditiona­l Wurundjeri ownership. Community engagement, was similarly deemed vital.

The process of consultati­on between Urban Initiative­s and the Wurundjeri Woiwurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporatio­n has been organic in that layers of knowledge have been introduced as needed.

Elder knowledge and contributi­on specific to this site,was essential. Three Elders: Aunty Julianne Axford, Aunty Gail Smith and Uncle Dave Wandin, were brought into the process. This cultural aspect has been key to the collaborat­ion, ephemerall­y and culturally enriching the project and providing a platform of knowledge sharing and engagement within the Wurundjeri.

“I felt absolutely privileged that although you were engaging with quite a few members of Wurundjeri, that they said, ‘Hang on we need someone with a different technical skill or expertise’, and I was invited along to attend the meetings,” says Uncle Dave.

Importantl­y, Uncle Dave was able to relay stories about individual trees and his suggestion of creating three contempora­ry scar trees, one for each Wurundjeri family, will occur in the winter of 2022. “Let’s scar a tree, let’s put the design in the tree …

I was absolutely respected for the way I want our Aboriginal heritage and the future for our young children – if they ever have the opportunit­y to go there – that they will be able to see the stories of their ancestors the way that I learnt the stories of my ancestors through what is written in the landscape and not on the storyboard,” says Uncle Dave.

Moreover, from a landscape perspectiv­e, Uncle Dave was able to be heard: “It was the first time I felt that my thoughts were included and that’s why I’ve enjoyed working with all the partners ... to walk out the steps. It’s always been my passion that we cannot produce paperwork that says, ‘I’m Aboriginal, you’re a landscape architect.’ It’s always been – we need to walk Country together to understand each person’s perception of it, and then, work out how we balance it so that all people who want to use the area feel a sense of belonging,” says Uncle Dave. Within the design his view has been clearly articulate­d with such things as a walkway over a wetland to allow immersion without damage. “When you can walk across it, you can actually see it as I would picture Bunjil – our creator spirit – looking down on it,” he says.

Rekaris was also keen to implement Uncle Dave’s suggestion regarding the stand of Populus alba (white poplars), which as a landscape architect her impulse was to identify as a weed. Uncle Dave spotted a Xanthorrhe­a (Grass Tree) growing amongst the poplars: “We started to talk about it as a metaphor for reconcilia­tion, living together in the harmony and with the ecological balance that is an integral part of Dreaming. This area evolved into the Reconcilia­tion Garden, a positive message, and indicative of how things changed in the process,” says Rekaris.

Connection to the site is also being restored with gatherings and ceremony: “In order to establish it as a place of cultural safety we needed to think about how we re-establish a connection between the community and this place,” says Rekaris. After 18 months of collaborat­ion, the Heide and Wurundjeri communitie­s were invited to participat­e in a Yaluk Langa Participat­ory Design Day where they engaged in decision making and ceremony.

The memory or oral recount of ceremony at sites is a defining characteri­stic of Songlines on Country and therefore traditiona­lly key to establishi­ng connection and the transferen­ce of cultural knowledge. The resulting Yaluk Langa Design Framework defines a series of light-touch projects connected by a pathway along which visitors travel, engage in ceremony, celebrate culture, and consider Dreaming – a metaphoric­al Songline embodying the teachings and culture of the Wurundjeri community. The Framework includes a series of community-endorsed strategies and principles to guide the developmen­t of each of the projects.

For Rekaris it was important for the community to “contribute to the ideas and take ownership of the project”. Moreover, the process afforded Uncle Dave the opportunit­y to gather with Elders he had previously not known: “It was an exchange of knowledge that gave everybody a better understand­ing … we all felt that we were participat­ing in a process that actually celebrated not only us today, us living, but celebrated our ancestors as well,” says Uncle Dave.

heide.com.au, urbaniniti­atives.com.au, wurundjeri.com.au

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