Centre for Creative and Cultural Research
11 Kirinari Street
Bruce ACT 2617
cccr@canberra.edu.au
Higher Degree by Research enquiries:
artsanddesignhdr@canberra.edu.au
Investigators: Professor Jason Bainbridge (CI), Associate Professor Cathy Hope, Dist. Professor Jen Webb, Dr Vahri McKenzie, Assistant Professor Denise Thwaites, Dr Ben Ennis Butler, Professor Robert Tanton, Professor Lain Dare, Associate Professor Leonie Pearson, Associate Professor Yogi Vidyattama, Dr Stephen Cassidy, Dr Jee Young Lee
Funder: ACT Government & º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigators: Dr Alison Wain
Funding: Australian Research Council Linkage Project
Partners: ANU (Lead), USyd, Australia's Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANTSO) and Roads and Maritime Services (now Transport for NSW)
Investigators: Associate Professor Tony Eaton, Mr Ian Drayton, Associate Professor Jordan Williams, Associate Professor Paul Magee
Funding: Australian Government Department of Defence, 2016–2023
What role can the arts and creativity play in navigating unresolved concerns, ongoing debates and controversial questions for our communities?
Exploring complex topics, from reconciliation and truth-telling in the context of colonialism to polarising social or political issues, this symposium will feature exchanges between leading artists and researchers from Australia and Northern Ireland about difficult conversations we, as a globally connected society, need to have today.
Chief Investigator: Associate Professor Cathy Hope
Funding: ACT Government
Places and spaces for creative production are vital to a healthy creative industry contributing to cultural diversity and inclusive societies. The Play, Creativity and Wellbeing Project partners with Molonglo Group to º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, to deliver a symposium that explores new models for the provision of creative space from around the world, with Gordon Seabright (, London), Michelle Tabet (, Sydney), Dr Cathy Hope (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ) and Tributary Projects.
Chief Investigator: Associate Professor Cathy Hope
Partners: Ginninderry/Riverview Development, Redbox Design
The Faculty of Arts and Design worked with the FAD-led Play Activation Network to deliver street activations alongside the delivery of 15 large street artworks in Braddon. Street performers, musicians, Queer flash mobs, skating crews and young/senior DJs performed throughout the city and Braddon to enliven this seminal urban art event. FAD student, Sebastian Winter, was employed as the creative producer of the program.
Regeneration is a collaborative response to complex traumas experienced by Australia’s rural communities from drought and bushfires to COVID-19. Drawing on the expertise of individuals and organisations with extensive experience in and knowledge of best-practice trauma treatment and disaster recovery, Regeneration will partner with rural communities to understand their trauma, offer clinical support and equip local people with disaster preparedness information and skills to build their capacity to respond to and transform future trauma.
Regeneration offers a three-tiered approach to transforming individual and community trauma:
Regeneration will help de-stigmatize trauma, provide individuals in rural communities with a deeper understanding of how it affects them and the people they love, and help re-knit the community bonds torn apart by recent and ongoing trauma. This initiative offers a roadmap for trauma transformation and disaster recovery which could ultimately enable rural Australian communities to thrive in the face of adversity.
This project is funded by The Hospital Research Foundation with funds raised by the Magwill Foundation – the charitable entity of Magda Szubanski and Will Connolly.
Chief Investigator: Dr Alison Wain (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ)
Investigators: Associate Professor Cathy Hope, Assistant Professor Denise Thwaites, Dr Vahri McKenzie
Forum Producer: Kiri Morcombe
Writer in Residence: Simone Penkethman
Partners: ACT Government, artsACT's Creative Recovery and Resilience Program, Regional Arts Fund
Website:
Investigators: Associate Professor Cathy Hope, Assistant Professor Denise Thwaites, Dr Vahri McKenzie
Emerging Creative Producer: Zora/Linyi Pang
Artists in Residence: Zhi Cham, Melanie Lane, Miriam Slater, Kirsten Wehner
Partners: ArtsACT & Belconnen Arts Centre
Website:
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigators: Professor Tracy Ireland (Lead CI, º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ), Associate Professor Tim Sherratt (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ), Professor Ross Gibson (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ), Dr Ben Ennis-Butler
Funding: Australian Research Council Linkage Project, 2018–2022
Partners: AirSevices Australia, National Museum of Australia, SFO Museum and the Civil Aviation Historical Society (CAHS)
The Intergenerational Pen Pal Pilot Project was a creative cross-disciplinary project that addressed the critical issues of social isolation and mental health for older Canberrans during and after COVID lockdown by developing sustainable and meaningful relationships, and helping young people improve their literacy skills through letter writing with pen pals from Ainslie Primary School. The pilot project included 20 older Canberrans connected with 20 children and their families in Years 1/ 2.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigators: Dr Cathy Hope and Dr Fanke Peng
Funding and Partners: Office of Seniors and Veterans, Northside Community Service, Ainslie Primary School, Council on the Ageing
Dr Cathy Hope partnered with Transport Canberra and City Services to co-author the , drawing on her significant engagement with the ACT community to identify aspirations for play spaces in the ACT.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding and Partners: Transport Canberra and City Services
Chief Investigators: Professor Tracy Ireland and Mr Hakim Abdul Rahim
Funder: ACT Government
The º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ has partnered with the Australian Academy of Science to research and develop an innovative sustainability plan for the renewal and replacement of environmental systems to work towards a net-zero emissions future for the National Heritage Listed Canberra landmark, the Shine Dome.
Led by the Faculty of Arts and Design, in collaboration with the Academy of Sciences, GML Heritage and GHD Engineering this multidisciplinary team will investigate innovative approaches to ensure progressive energy and emissions reductions while protecting and sustainably managing the Shine Dome’s national heritage values.
As part of the project, there will be series of events that will seek to initiate conversations around heritage values and how can these values be managed with sustainability in mind.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigators: Professor Michael Jasper and Professor Tracy Ireland
Funder: National Heritage Grants, Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment
Partners: The Australian Academy of Science, GML Heritage, GHD Group
A Report was commissioned by Transport Canberra and City Services (TCCS) to outline the community engagement strategies undertaken by four design consultant teams between February and July 2019 for the Better Suburbs five whole of suburb play reviews.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding: Transport Canberra and City Services (TCCS), ACT Government
Investigators: Dr Cathy Hope and Dr Sylvia Alston
Funding: Belconnen Community Services and Wellspring Environmental Arts & Design
This report was commissioned by Belconnen Community Services (BCS) and Wellspring Environmental Arts and Design to provide an evaluation of the impact of the Social Art Park as part of ArtsACT’s community outreach funding initiative. The ‘Social Art Park project built on BCS’s history of community engagement in the arts for personal change and is part of the organisation’s long-term strategy to empower individuals as community members through expression and participation. The project involved local residents, external partners and the wider community to demonstrate the transformative power of arts engagement
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigators: Dr Cathy Hope (Lead), Associate Professor Bethaney Turner, Dr Kate Holland, Dr Denise Thwaites, Professor Jen Webb and Professor Michael Jasper
Funding: Canberra Renewal Authority, ACT Government
Partners: Tait Network, Ainslie & Gorman Arts Centres, Dionysus Movement
Chief Investigators: Denise Thwaites (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ), Fanke Peng (º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ), Jessica Herrington, Anna Madeleine, Daniel Savage, Kate Matthews, Adelaide Rief and Josh Harle
Funder: Australia Council for the Arts
The project aims to discover, document, and analyse a comprehensive overview of client-sponsored, instructional and government-departmental filmmaking in Australia in the post-WWII years prior to the rise of widespread video production in the late-1970s.
We are examining purposeful films that were made and distributed outside the well-studied systems of entertainment, ‘theatrical’ exhibition and visual arts installation; films that were produced, distributed and exhibited to a wide range of (as-yet under-investigated) audiences in ‘non-theatrical’ contexts and spaces. These were films produced in significant numbers worldwide (including in Australia) for the functional purposes of instruction, surveillance, quantification or record-keeping rather than principally for reasons of commercial entertainment or clearly-contextualised artistic and aesthetic appreciation. Although such films represent a large proportion of film production during the years 1945 - 1980, very little scholarly work has been done on such titles in the Australian context.
Investigators: Professor Ross Gibson (Lead CI); Associate Professor Michael Broderick; Associate Professor Deane Williams; Professor Joseph Masco
Funding: Australian Research Council Discovery Project 2016–2018
Chief Investigators: Dr Denise Thwaites
Funder: Western Sydney University
Chief Investigators: Dr Ben Ennis Butler and Mr Max Maxwell
Funder: City Renewal Authority (CRA) Dickson Grant, ACT Govt
Streetwise was a project that sought to provide older Canberrans with the opportunity to learn street art skills from younger artists, and deliver works that transformed the public realm. Twenty people participated in this project and formed the ‘Silver Sprayers’, delivering works in Woden, Haig Park and Narrabundah Playing Fields.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding: Transport Canberra and City Services funded and delivered the project in partnership with Dr Cathy Hope.
The Canberra Nature Play Space Study was commissioned by Transport Canberra and City Services, ACT Government, to better inform the planning and design of two nature play sites – Glebe Park, Canberra and Eddison Park, Woden – as identified by the Better Suburbs Play Space Forum.
This Study involved the collection and analysis of user attitudinal and usage data from four nature play spaces in Canberra within the context of the literature on nature play. These four nature play spaces are:
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding: Transport Canberra and City Services, ACT Government
The Canberra Destination Playground Study is a comprehensive audit of 8 destination play spaces in the ACT and a city-wide survey that captures community aspirations for ACT play spaces. The Study informed ACT Government’s Better Suburbs Play Space initiative and underpins the ACT Play Space Strategy. The report was commissioned by the City Renewal Authority.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding: City Renewal Authority, ACT Government
Report: PLAY: Canberra Destination Playgrounds Study (PDF 6MB)
This study, commissioned by the City Renewal Authority, seeks to contribute to the development of a vital public realm in Canberra through international exemplars of playful urban activation. It highlights examples of urban play that can contribute to the realization of the five place principles of the (2015) ACT Government Strategic Urban Design Framework – connected; vibrant; responsive; diverse; green.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Investigator: Dr Cathy Hope
Funding: ACT Government
Our research focuses on the role of narration and story as sense making and situation awareness in industry contexts and simulated training environments. Industry collaborators have included the Royal Adelaide Hospital (Adelaide), CAE, Calvary Hospital (Canberra) and the Defence Department, Australian Army.
Presentations:
Workshops & Seminars:
Publications:
Investigators: Centenary Professor Ross Gibson and Dr Teresa Crea
Partners: Industry collaborators have included the Royal Adelaide Hospital, CAE (Canadian Aviation Electronics); Calvary Hospital (ACT) Department of Defence - Australian Army; the Asia-Pacific Simulation Alliance; and Simulation Australasia
Chief Investigators: Bethaney Turner
Funder: Belconnen Community Services
The project explores the meeting of Indigenous Australian story practices with the teaching of creative writing, and how this meeting can be used both to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students and to lift cultural competency across the university community. To do this, the project entwines creative and traditional research with teaching and community outreach. As well as connecting First Nations community members with the university through on-campus workshops, it provides a research basis for the integration of Indigenous Australian content and epistemology in mainstream creative writing classes. It supports the development of new Indigenous Australian writers, funds the creation of new works and investigates best practices for teaching creative writing to both mainstream and Indigenous Australian cohorts.
From 2017–2019 this project is funded by a grant from the Indigenous Languages and Arts Program, Commonwealth Department of Communications and the Arts. The project team will host visiting Indigenous Australian writers across the grant period, including for a national symposium on April 6, 2018. A first paper emerging from the research was published in TEXT Journal, November 2017.
Investigators: Dr Jen Crawford, Dr Paul Collis and Dr Jordan Williams
Funding: Indigenous Languages and Arts Program, Commonwealth Department of Communications and the Arts, 2017–2019
This project plans to analyse national graduate employment in Australia's creative and cultural industries, and compare the utility of 'creative' and 'cultural' models for tracking employment outcomes. Although the image of work in the creative and cultural industries is attractive to students and course planners alike, international evidence suggests graduates face very poor employment prospects. The project plans to use a proven model for mapping creative graduates to compare the value of creative degrees for the creative workforce in two nations, Australia and the United Kingdom; and to use sophisticated quantitative analysis of national datasets and interviews to produce a comprehensive study of creative graduate work. The three year project will produce the first ever international mapping of graduate creative work using the 2009 UNESCO framework for cultural statistics.
In 2016 the team commenced modelling Australian GDS and Census data and presented a panel at the International Crossroads in Cultural Studies conference, University of Sydney, in December 2016.
Investigators: Professor Jen Webb; Associate Professor Scott Brook (Lead CI, RMIT); Associate Professor Jonathan Corcoran; Dr Roberta Comunian; Professor Alessandra Faggian; Professor Philip Lewis
Funding: Australian Research Council Discovery Project 2016–2019
The research seeks to understand how graduates of creative arts programs in Australia and China build creative vocations. It investigates the motivations for and rewards of unpaid cultural work across three areas of graduate work (visual arts, creative writing and performance) in two United Nations-recognised Creative Cities: Melbourne and Shanghai. Such research is of high significance for curriculum developers, as studies show that employment outcomes for creative arts graduates remain very poor, despite a growing cultural economy. The project is expected to lead to a theoretically innovative, evidence-based and globally transferable account of the practical economy of arts work, one that can assist creative arts programs to better prepare students.
In 2016 Associate Professor Scott Brook and Professor Jen Webb were busy with Year 2 of this 3 year funded ARC Discovery Project. Scott travelled regularly to Melbourne to interview graduates of writing and visual arts courses, while Prof Webb commenced work on a curriculum review of writing and visual arts programs. Scott gave a paper at the International Conference for Cultural Policy Studies in Seoul, while the pair presented on a panel with Prof David Throsby (MQ) at the annual conference of The Australian Sociological Association in Melbourne.
Investigators: Professor Jen Webb & Associate Professor Scott Brook, º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, Professor Justin O'Connor, Monash University (Lead CI) and Professor Shilian Shan, Shanghai Jiaotong University
Funding: Australian Research Council Discovery Project (DP150101477) 2015–2017.
The Promotion of Unity and Harmony among the South Sudanese Community in Australia through Pathways of Resilience aims to investigate the impact of the current conflict in S. Sudan on South Sudanese Australians and identify pathways for promoting harmony.
Investigators: Dr Nawal El-Gack, Dr Judy Hemming and Gabriel Yak
Funding: Department of Social Services
Investigators: Assoc Prof Tracy Ireland with Assoc Prof Mitchell Whitelaw, Dr Alison Wain and Prof Paul Ashton (UTS)
Funding: Consultancy for Airservices Australia
Creativity is the engine of a healthy and successful society. In order to learn how best to encourage and generate creativity, there needs to be a greater understanding of how successful creative professionals operate. This project focuses on poets as a case study that will inform the development of ways to enhance creativity in other professional groups.
Investigators: Prof Jen Webb and Assoc Prof Paul Magee, º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ; Prof Kevin Brophy, University of Melbourne; Prof Michael Biggs, University of Hertfordshire.
Funding: Australian Research Council Discovery Project 2013–2016.
Investigator: Assoc Professor Mitchell Whitelaw
Funding: Research contract under the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ-NICTA umbrella agreement, 2012-2015.
Investigators: Assoc Professor David Jones and Assoc Professor Richard Tucker, Deakin University; Professor Darryl Low Choy, Griffith; Dr Scott Heyes, º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ; Assoc Professor Grant Revell, UWA.
Funding: OLT Grant 2012-2014 (led by Deakin University)
The Queenslander was the weekly summary and literary edition of the Brisbane Courier (now The Courier-Mail) and was published from 1866–1939. This showcase features nearly 1000 coloured covers and illustrated pages from The Queenslander newspaper which can be explored by year, topic and colour.
Funding: Digital collections research project, State Library of Queensland, 2014.
Investigator: Assoc Prof Mitchell Whitelaw
Funding: Contracted research for the National Gallery of Australia (FAD Micro Linkage project), 2013.
Investigators: Assoc Professor Mitchell Whitelaw and Ben Ennis Butler
A seed project for the development of an Aboriginal living cultural centre in the lower south east, Mt Gambier City Council, 2013.
Investigator: Dr Scott Heyes
Collaboration with the Australian Institute of Sports, 2013.
Investigator: Dr Carlos Montana Hoyos (with the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Industrial Design Team).
Collaboration with the Australian Institute of Sports, 2013.
Investigator: Dr Carlos Montana Hoyos (with the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Industrial Design Team).
Centre for Creative and Cultural Research
11 Kirinari Street
Bruce ACT 2617
cccr@canberra.edu.au
Higher Degree by Research enquiries:
artsanddesignhdr@canberra.edu.au
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ acknowledges the Ngunnawal people, traditional custodians of the lands where Bruce campus is situated. We wish to acknowledge and respect their continuing culture and the contribution they make to the life of Canberra and the region. We also acknowledge all other First Nations Peoples on whose lands we gather.