INTERVIEW: Sagey Ceramics
Meet Sage! A super talented and creative Ceramicist based in Boorloo (Perth). Born and raised in “this quiet, quaint place…” Sage is an up and coming artist with her own flare on contemporary pottery and tackling the small business world head on. She is artsy, has a brilliant outlook on modern art and is keen to share her love of life with you; through her ceramics!
NEWS: KickstART Virtual 2020 won an award!
Our project KickstART Virtual 2020 won the City of Perth Awards for Outstanding Digital Engagement During COVID-19 at this year's Performing Arts WA Awards.
INTERVIEW: Justin Sider
Meet Justin Sider, local drag king and performing artist, musician and avid gardener. Propel is super excited to be working with him for two Youth Week WA KickstART Festival events, a drag workshop for young people, Drag Kingdom and KickstART’s first ever all ages drag performance, Drag Yourself Out! We sat down with Justin to chat about these two events, how he got into industry and all things drag in Perth.
INTERVIEW: Ria Maglinao
A long time Propel Friend, Ria Maglinao is a Walyalup based creative and photographer who you’ve probably seen floating around at our events and programs. Ria started out as a Mosaic Intern back in 2019, and her career has since flourished. She most recently facilitated Beauty in the Mundane, a Mosaic photography workshop and has curated a line-up of local photographers for Youth Arts Mingle Night + Photography Exhibition. We chatted to Ria about what the event will look like, life as a freelancer and what the Youth Week WA 2021 theme ‘Our Path’ means to her.
INTERVIEW: Anastasia Beasley
Meet Anastasia Beasley, an artist, arts manager and long-time Propel friend who’s bringing Tea & Symphony and Postcards From Here to the 2021 Youth Week WA KickstART Festival. We sat down with Anastasia to talk about who she is and the events she’s hosting in April and what the 2021 Youth Week WA theme ‘Our Path’ means to her.
INTERVIEW: Ryan Ng
We met Ryan Ng a few months back when he dropped by our office to find out more about Perth’s local art community, and we were met by an eager and passionate visual artist hailing from Penang, Malaysia. We sat down with him to chat about how he got into and learned visual arts, what he’s learned from Chinese brush painting, how he admires the attitude and approach of his mentors, the Penang art scene and finding a particular visual arts style.
Kadjin x Highs and Low
We recently partnered with local footwear and apparel boutique Highs and Lows (HAL) for their 15th anniversary, and to celebrate we co-hosted Halelujah and HAL released limited edition sneakers with proceeds donated to Kadjin – the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Youth Arts Network.
INTERVIEW: Zoë Sydney
Zoë Sydney is an artist and physicist, you might recognise her from Snart Club – a science-art club that did a workshop at our 2019 event Moonboorli (Beyond) and her DIY clay making video we posted for Youth Week WA 2020. Most recently, Zoë’s painting Fifteen (2020), a portrait of her younger brother’s birthday was a finalist in The Lester Prize for Portraiture. We chatted to her about who she is and what she does, what science and art means to her, and her painting for The Lester Prize for Portraiture.
INTERVIEW: Tasha Faye
Tasha Faye is no stranger to Propel. The young freelance photographer has been friends with us over a number of years and we’ve had the privilege of seeing her career grow. We chatted to Tasha about her how she got into freelance photography as a career, being a woman freelancer, and the complexities of pay and portraiture copyright. She also offers her advice to any young creative wanting to make photography into a career.
YCULTURE CHATS: Charlotte Otton
Charlotte Otton is a Sydney-raised, Perth-based performer, writer and theatre maker, best known for her award-winning shows Let Me Finish., Feminah, and 30 Day Free Trial (with Andrew Sutherland). We chatted to Charlotte about the development of Let Me Finish., funded through the Drug Aware YCulture Metro program.
INTERVIEW: Elsewhere/Rebecca
Elsewhere/Rebecca is a sound artist, electronic music producer and performance maker based in Boorloo on Whadjuk Noongar Boodja. Elsewhere/Rebecca’s debut album With Me, We Walk sponsored by Drug Aware YCulture Metro, recently came out and featured a compilation of tracks and poems written in the past few years. We chatted to the multitalented artist about who she is and what she does, her debut album and the special way she launched it.
YCULTURE CHATS: Scott McArdle
Scott McArdle is a Perth-based writer, director, actor and founder of independent theatre company, Second Chance Theatre. We chatted to Scott about his two Drug Aware YCulture Metro funded projects, the developments of both Laika: A Staged Radio Play (2017) and Josephine! (2018).
Bi+ Awareness Week 2020: Features
Propel are proud to be a community home to many talented young people all across the sexuality continuum, and this #BiWeek we are excited to be featuring some bi-loved local young artists and Propel family across our socials to share their messages for Bi+ Awareness Week 2020!
Bi+ Awareness Week 2020
Bi+ Awareness Week takes place 16-23 September. At Propel we recognise and appreciate that sexuality is a spectrum, that gender and sexuality are not binary, and that everyone has the right to identify and express themselves on their own terms all year round.
INTERVIEW: Carrissa Wu
Meet Carrissa Wu, Beeliar Boodjar based local maker and small business owner of Jotterbook Flowers. Carrissa handcrafts delicate paper flower bouquets, accessories and decorations with you in mind. We sat down with Carrissa to talk about her upbringing in Singapore, how she got into making paper flowers and eventually turning it into a small business, and what she’s learned from the Black Lives Matter Movement on social media.
INTERVIEW: Cezera Critti-Schnaars Part 2
Part 2 continues from Part 1 of emerging Noongar and Greek actor Cezera Critti-Schnaars's interview. Continuing from chatting about her experience with Hecate, Cezera and Yoshika chat about the importance of representing normalcy, how Indigenous actors are often asked to act “more Black” and how Kadjin helps young and emerging Indigenous artists.
INTERVIEW: Cezera Critti-Schnaars Part 1
Cezera Critti-Schnaars is a young Noongar and Greek actor whose passion for acting started when she was very young. Back in February this year at Perth Festival, she starred in Yirra Yaakin Theatre Company’s production of Hecate, a reimagining of Shakespeare’s Macbeth performed entirely in Noongar. In Part 1 of Cezera’s interview, we chatted to her about her high school days, playing Fleance in Hecate, Indigenous identity and the significance of Noongar language.
INTERVIEW: Albertina Thabisani Ncube
Albertina Thabisani Ncube is a Zimbabwe-born, WA based creative that specialises in photography and videography. As a woman of colour, Albertina’s work focuses and uplifts people of melanin that was influenced by the lack of representation in Australia. In the lead up to her project ABANTU Exhibition presented by Drug Aware on Saturday 1 August, we chatted to Albertina about Black representation and the recent Black Lives Matter movement, the platform she’s creating towards cross-cultural exchange in ABANTU, suffering from an identity crisis and the importance of support and opportunity for young creatives of colour.
INTERVIEW: Brooke Collard
Brooke Woolcock (Collard) is a Whadjuk Ballardong woman of the Bibbulmin nation and a storyteller at heart. She tells stories through film as a writer/producer with a focus on telling stories of those underrepresented such as First Nations and LGBTQIA+. In the latest #YoungArtistsofWA interview, we chat to Brooke about her current projects, being a Member of Kadjin, what healing means to her and the change she hopes for in the WA arts community.
COVID-19 Journal Entry #8: Jing Yi Foo
Jing was recently a Project Administration intern at Propel and holds experience in corporate, sports and events management industries. She is passionate about sharing her love for sports and music with others, especially the youth. Jing writes about the new norm she’s slowly adjusting to at home.