Taking off her coat so her friend can take her photo
Food hall, open 24 hours
Tags on a no-smoking sign outside Melbourne Aquarium
Chilling in Enterprize Park along the Yarra River
One of the scar trees in Enterprize Park
Enterprize Park commemorates the spot where the first settlers aboard the ship Enterprize went ashore on 30 August 1835.
Today, it is the site of the Scar Project, a collaborative installation by Aboriginal artists who used original wharf poles from Queens Bridge to engage with the tradition of tree scarring.
Traditionally, Aboriginal people would take pieces of bark from trees to make canoes, shields or baby cradles. The resulting ‘scar trees’ would also serve as signposts for other clans to know they had entered the land of another community. These trees are rare today, but for Aboriginal people they are very precious.
Read more about this artwork: Scar – A Stolen Vision.
Walking through the scar trees in Enterprize Park
The City of Melbourne commissioned eight indigenous artists to create a relocatable permanent public artwork for the city.
Initially placed in the city square, the 24 poles that form the work “Scar – A Stolen Vision” are now permanently located in Enterprize Park adjacent to the Melbourne Aquarium.
The works, by eight indigenous artists, are all vertical timber poles, somewhat like trees, and reflect various interpretations of the relationship between the artists culture and the modern western city.
Read more about this artwork: Scar – A Stolen Vision.