Distant Shores bringing our community closer

City of Port Phillip
The Distant Shores exhibition, opening at the Carlisle Street Art Space (CSAS) on 17 March, poignantly conveys the cultural ties of recently arrived migrants, refugees and asylum seekers in Port Phillip.

The exhibition, presented by CSAS at the St Kilda Town Hall, is co-produced by Melbourne-based photographic artist Morganna Magee and curator Anna Monea, and supported by Space2b.

Port Phillip Council Mayor Heather Cunsolo welcomes Distant Shores as an important part of the Council's Cultural Diversity Week calendar.

"The latest Census tells us that Port Phillip is home to people from over 160 different birthplaces, speaking more than 120 different languages and dialects.," Cr Cunsolo said.

"Celebrating and promoting inclusion is incredibly important to our City and we are proud to support this insightful exhibition, which speaks to our shared humanity."

Distant Shores combines documentary photography, family photographs and written testimony to tell the story of the migrant experience through themes of cultural connection, memory, longing and loss.

The exhibition also features paintings by four of the participants involved in this project. Anahita Diba, Rahila Zeeshan, Tadros Hanna and Abouk Giir will present works reflecting their cultural heritage, interests and concerns.

Ms Monea, a St Kilda resident, said Distant Shores explores the cultural and personal links of each participant to their homeland and how they have created a new life in Australia.

"Migrants, refugees and people seeking asylum leave their homelands for a myriad of reasons, often horrific, and in many cases they have to leave loved ones behind," she said.

"If they are fortunate, they have photographs - small mementos of their loved ones back home. By presenting these images and recreating them within an Australian setting, Distant Shores offers insight into each person's life and how far they have travelled."

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