MELBOURNE.- The Naomi Milgrom Foundation today released MPavilions expanded call-out for artists, educators and designers, while announcing that instead of building a new pavilion this year, it will focus on reconnecting communities with the six MPavilions gifted to the city by the foundation. It was also announced, MPavilion 2019 designed by Australias only Pritzker Prize Architect Glenn Murcutt AO, has been gifted to The University of Melbourne and will be relocated in the summer.
The decision to engage with these MPavilions for the 2020/2021 season has been made as a direct response to the COVID-19 pandemic. At a time where artists and designers have been disadvantaged, displaced and disconnected due to the pandemic, MPavilion is adapting its operation to be more accessible to more Melburnians while supporting new needs in the most efficient and sustainable way possible. Driven by this mission to aid creativity in the wider community in a significant way, MPavilion is set to deliver an amplified new program across these locations from 12 November 2020 to 21 March 2021.
Naomi Milgrom AO, founder of the Naomi Milgrom Foundation commented: Strengthening our creative communities is at the heart of the Naomi Milgrom Foundation, so it has been natural for us to respond to the pandemic by creating more opportunities for designers and artists this year. By being resourceful and re-using our permanent MPavilion locations, MPavilion will play a meaningful new role in helping to revitalise our neighbourhoods with the work of artists and designers.
Amanda Levete CBE, a Stirling Prize-winning British architect, and principal of AL_A, whose MPavilion 2015 is located at Collins St Docklands, commented: In our lifetimes, theres never been a more important moment to make the most of the resources we already haveespecially architectural structures and spaces, so Im delighted that my MPavilion 2015 will be part of this initiative.
The powerful new program will aid and boost local creativity through a series of commissions, including the MERGE music commissions, art installations, and graphic and fashion design commissions. Through a call-out for expressions of interest that is bigger than any MPavilion has done before, artists and designers will be given the opportunities and tools they need to break new ground in their practices and continue to grow. With funding of up to $5,000 each available to support selected projects, artists and designers will be asked to respond to the program themes: RE-EMERGE: A Remix (November), IRL: Exploring Social Space (December), PRESERVATION: Propagating Knowledge (January), 1+1: Who are we together? (February), SPACE: Experiments in Time (March).
In addition to Levetes Collins Street Docklands pavilion, MPavilion 2017 at Monash University designed by Rem Koolhaas and David Gianotten/ OMA will be used; as well as MPavilion 2016 by Bijoy Jain at Melbourne Zoo; and MPavilion 2014 by Sean Godsell, now modified at Melbournes Hellenic Museum. Coinciding with the 2020 program announcements, the relocation set for Carme Pinós pavilion will be revealed in September, along with further details on Glenn Murcutts at The University of Melbourne.
The MPavilion 2020 program will endeavour to stimulate the audience and artistic engagement with a greater investment in artists, performers and collaborators. Through a range of safe event formats, the program will supplement its physical expansion across the city by also being shared online.
MPavilion is a philanthropic success story that has seen government, business and private sectors collaborate to bring an important new civic space to Melbourne with strong public, industry and educational components. Supported by major partners City of Melbourne, the Victorian State Government through Creative Victoria and Development Victoria, ANZ and RACV, it has received over 630,000 visitors since its inception in 2014.