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Departure

Departure is an ongoing community-based art project facilitated by Artists in Residence, Christine Ko and Louis Lim. Christine and Louis collaborate with migrant community members to hand-make kites inspired by their experiences of migration. Read the letters below to discover the stories behind the kites.

 

This residency is delivered as part of Brisbane City Council’s BrisAsia Festival 2024, produced by Sounds Across Oceans. Official Media Partner SBS.

MoB’s Artist in Residence program is supported by Tim Fairfax AC.

Amelia and James

Dear Reader,

We are Amelia and James. Amelia is turning nine this year and James is six. We were both born in Sydney. Our mum is Chinese and was born in France and our dad was born in England.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Charmaine

Dear Reader,

I was born in Cape Town, South Africa, pre the dismantling of the divisive apartheid. I applied for permanent residency with the Australian High Commission in Cape Town and through a rigorous process I was granted a visa and arrived in Melbourne in April of 1980. At the time I was 24. I was that confident about living in Australia permanently that I actually bought myself a one-way ticket! If you want to make your dreams a reality then you have to manifest it.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Isabelle

Dear Reader,

I was born in Malaysia and I arrived in Australia in 1988. I’ve been here for almost 40 years. I turned 50 recently. I did high school in Malaysia up to year seven and I came here when I was 14 and started year nine in Melbourne. I went to university in Melbourne, then I went overseas to Canada to work for a year. Then after that I went to New Zealand for four years, where I met my husband; came back to Darwin, had my daughter in Darwin; and then from Darwin moved to Brisbane. I’ve been in Brisbane now for nine years.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Mikha

Dear Reader,

My name is Mikha. Well I suppose it’s my Australian name. My real name is Marichje. I chose a different name to be a bit more approachable, I suppose. And I was born in South Africa in 1996, I’m 27 now. Part of my family moved here in 2017. That included my dad and my mum and my two youngest siblings, my sister and my brother. They all moved here on the 1st of March 2017. And when I finished my studies I moved here on the 12th of March 2019. And then my last sister joined us in December 2019. And so that was the six of my immediate family all together under one roof for the first time since 2017.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Susan

Dear Reader,

My name is Susan, which is my English name. Actually, my mum gave this English name to me even though she can’t really speak a word of English. So she doesn’t really know how English name works, but her last name is actually Su. So she thought that it would also be family name first and first name last, like Chinese names. So she thought Su then would incorporate her last name and that would be the first bit of the name as well. And actually for a while, I really hated the name because I started to realise that no one my age was named Susan. Really grandma level. But now I think I’ve made peace with it… mostly.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Anna

Dear Reader,

I’m from Barcelona in Catalonia and my first husband and I decided to come to Australia because of the political situation in Spain. We had a military junta, and it was there for 40 years almost, and nothing was changing. I got married with my first husband in 1971 when I was 21, and we decided to come to – or to go any country.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Huy

Dear Reader,

My family’s from Vietnam, we’re all from South Vietnam. We left separately during the Vietnam War. I was born in ’81 and my dad left just before I was born, so I never met my dad until I was about five. He got permission to leave the country, so he couldn’t take anyone with him. I don’t really know the exact details, but he left and he came over to Australia to create a new life for himself. We were stuck back in Vietnam, my mum, older brother and older sister and the rest of our extended family.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Masimba

Dear Reader,

I was born in 1983 in Harare, Zimbabwe and lived there pretty much most of my life. Most of my family lives in the UK by default because of what’s happened politically in Zimbabwe. There was a time when people found a loophole of sorts involving nursing where you could go to the UK without having to apply for a visa and you’d automatically get in. A lot of people went and became nurses. You did your five years and you’d get citizenship.

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Photo: Louis Lim.

Matt

Dear Reader,

My name is Matt Hsu. I am a Taiwanese-Australian composer and anti-racism activist. My parents were both born in Taiwan and they came to Australia in ‘85. I was born in ‘86. I grew up wholly as an Australian kid, but at home, I spoke Mandarin with my parents. It was like, at home, I was Taiwanese and then I’d leave the house and it’s “Oh, we’re in Australia.” I experienced feelings of conflict between those two worlds all the time, alongside some sharp experiences of racism as a toddler. It’s shaped my identity of who I am and my personal hang-ups and the things I think about and the way I talk to shopkeepers or interact in very white spaces. A lot of my identity has been shaped by looking Asian in a white-dominant culture.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Nerea

Dear Reader,

I was born in Mexico in this place called Puerto Vallarta. I moved to Australia when I was around eight months old. Mum’s side of the family are actually from Spain, and my Dad’s side is half-Australian, half- Mexican – his Dad was born in Mexico, but his mum was born in Australia and has European roots.

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Nicole

Dear Reader,

My parents moved to Australia from Mexico before I was born. I was born in Brisbane and we were living in Tenerife but I don’t remember that apartment. But then we moved to this house in New Farm. It was really big. It had a verandah at the end, and I remember I had all my toys on one side, and the rooms were in the middle of the house. And then the other side was the kitchen and the dining area, and outside it had a really big garden, but you had to wear shoes because the grass was really spiky and thorny.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Sisi

Dear Reader,

I was born in a place called Bulawayo in 1983, it’s the second largest city in Zimbabwe. I traveled to the States for about a year and a half, and I did elementary and middle school there. But most of my schooling was in Zimbabwe. Then in 2003, when I finished high school, I moved to Brisbane, Australia.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Tammy

Dear Reader,

I was born on the Sunny Coast in 1986 and grew up when it was pretty turbulent politically, especially on the Sunshine Coast. It was Pauline Hanson era. From the late 80s to, I’d say, the mid-90s is when racial tension was brewing. Pauline was from Ipswich at the time but her party had a very large and boisterous presence on the Sunny Coast. There were a lot of supporters. But I think, when I was young, I didn’t actually know the extent of it.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

Tomas

Dear Reader,

I was born in the south of Spain, Málaga, in 1944, and in that time, the 50s and 60s, in Spain was very bad because Spain have a civil war, and it start in 1936 and finish 1939. And was all depressed, no work, no school, no nothing for the poor, for the workers.

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Photo: Louis Lim. 

View Departure at Museum of Brisbane. Open daily, 10am–5pm.

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