ACMI announces World Premiere 2023 Melbourne Winter Masterpieces Exhibition ‘Goddess’
Subscribe
X

Subscribe to Forte Magazine

13.12.2022

ACMI announces World Premiere 2023 Melbourne Winter Masterpieces Exhibition ‘Goddess’

L - R : Laverne Cox in Paper Magazine, 2020, © Joshua Kissi. Marilyn Monroe, image by Milton H. Green e , © Archive on behal f of Milton H. Greene. Anna May Wong , i mage courtesy of CPA Media Pte Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo

ACMI is paying tribute to the formidable women of the screen in next year’s Melbourne  Winter Masterpieces blockbuster: Goddess.

Arriving in Melbourne in April 2023, Goddess, the landmark ACMI-curated exhibition will unveil, examine and celebrate the changing representation of femininity across film history through provocative on-screen moments.

Featuring never-before-seen costumes,  cinematic treasures, interactive experiences and large-scale projections and presenting the daring, disruptive and defiant characters that have shaped our screen culture, the exhibition invites audiences to celebrate the power and complexity of the goddess on screen. ACMI  will present Goddess in its world premiere in Melbourne, opening 5 April 2023, before the exhibition tours internationally.

Stay up to date with what’s happening in and around the region here

From the icons of the silent era to classic Hollywood heroines to cinema’s memorable villains and the stars of Bollywood blockbusters, Goddess is a powerful portrait of on-screen  personas who have come to define and disrupt the feminine ideal.

Going behind the lens,  Goddess will also examine the off-screen conversations – and even social rebellions – these  portrayals often ignited, from the gender redefining sartorial statements of Marlene Dietrich in Morocco (1930) and Tilda Swinton in Orlando (1992) to Pam Grier’s boundary breaking Blaxploitation film career, the impact of Elaine Crombie in Kiki and Kitty (2017)  and Margot Robbie in Birds of Prey (2020) to today’s unfolding Me Too movement and the  expanded representations of womanhood found in India, China and Japan’s cinematic  histories.

With lush costuming, immersive video works, evocative soundscapes by Melbourne-based  composer Chiara Kickdrum and over 150 original objects, artworks, props and sketches on  display – many of which have never been seen before in Australia – Goddess will consider  how screen culture has shaped and challenged audiences’ views of gender and  womanhood. Showcasing Mae West’s sky-high heels in Belle of the Nineties (1934), the  costumes worn by Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon in the iconic road movie Thelma &  Louise (1991) and the rich detail of Michelle Yeoh’s fight-ready silks from Crouching  Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), the exhibition offers a fresh perspective on some of cinema’s  most memorable female characters.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by ACMI (@acmionline)

Minister for Creative Industries, Steve Dimopoulos, said: “We’re backing another world  premiere, Australian-exclusive for Melbourne, with ACMI’s latest exhibition Goddess to  celebrate game-changing women of the screen.”

“Winter in Victoria already brings a spectacular offering of events and activities, with this  latest addition drawing more visitors to discover everything there is to love about  Melbourne.”

ACMI Director of Experience & Engagement, Dr Britt Romstad, said: “The women of  Goddess are bold, rebellious and defiant. Their power is expressed in numerous ways – in  what they wear, how they move and the stories they tell.”

“ACMI’s exhibition honours their influence and daring, and explores how they have  transformed the face and expectations of on-screen femininity for audiences, time and time  again.”

A vibrant Goddess events program, including late-night exhibition access, performances, talks and film screenings, exhibition ambassadors and guests, will be announced in  February 2023 when tickets go on sale.

Find out more here