ART/ TECH/ NATURE/ CULTURE CURATORIAL AND CREATIVE RESIDENCY

Last verse

Pale Blue Dot Collective - Louise Beer + John Hooper

BigCi Residency
Environmental Art Award 2020 (delayed)
Residency completed in July 2022

10m28s

Last verse is a dual screen film made using footage and sound recorded in and around BigCi and up to Blackheath in the Blue Mountains of Australia. The film depicts two temporalities. Firstly from the perspective of a non-human animal and secondly, a cosmic time frame. Are we cosmically insignificant, or cosmically significant?

As we zoom out further, we might think that nothing we do matters, eventually Earth will be absorbed into the sun, and no trace of our world will exist. But what about the fact that there is no other world just like ours, no other world with kangaroos, skinks or gang-gang cockatoos? It has taken our world ~13.7 billion years of the universe existing, beginning with an extraordinary start, billions of years of star formation, the gathering dust, the cooling of our rocky world and the formation of our oceans and atmosphere to develop into our home. All of these processes have helped the eucalyptus trees to grow into homes for insects, animals and birds, have helped the pagoda’s to form, have helped our brains to develop in such a way that we can look out at the pinpricks of light in the sky and through research, understand that they are unfathomably old and unfathomably large spheres of gas. 

It took a vast period of time for our universe to form into the one we see around us. One day, Earth will no longer exist. Time will go on for an immeasurable period, before time itself will cease to exist. Does each rotation of our blue marble around our star draw the universe increasingly closer to existing without life as we understand it?


Pale Blue Dot Collective Artist’s Talk
For our residency we also created a talk, which includes the film.

Images from BigCi Residency, Blue Mountains, Australia
Photography by Pale Blue Dot Collective

Artshed, BigCi Residency. This incredible building was our home for 4 weeks.

Ancient pagoda, Blue Mountains

Burnt tree, Blue Mountains

Geological formation, Blue Mountains


Images from Mount John Observatory research trip in Takapō, Aotearoa New Zealand
Photography by Pale Blue Dot Collective

Night landscape, Mount John Observatory, Takapō

Mount John Observatory, Takapō

View from observatory, Takapō

If you have experience of an observatory based residency and would like to share any feedback you have - please send me an email and we can arrange a time to chat.