There are eight separate spaces to explore, each featuring radically different light shows accompanied by “club hits from the past 30 years.” The names given each room, including Search, Radiate, and Throwback are too vague to really have a real meaning, diminishing any kind of artistic merit the show attempts to offer.
By the end it feels as if organisers have emptied the techno toy box to create some cool effects and then grafted on an artistic statement as an afterthought. The overall effect is pleasant enough with sufficient shiny baubles to sustain the walk. If that’s enough for you then the ticket price is probably worth it, however don’t go looking for any more profound meaning.
Over at the Botanic Gardens a family ticket for Lightscape costs $128. Individual adult and child ticket are $38 and $28 respectively. This one is billed as “an immersive experience” through a 1.8 km trail alongside Sydney Harbour.
The familiar arches of Winter Cathedral, a part of the walk, have quickly become a favourite. They are fabulous for selfies, but you also get the feeling anyone could duck to Bunnings for some fairy lights to create the same effect at home.
In terms of the actual artworks created with lights, Giant Bunch of Tulips and the gravity-defying dandelions in Light a Wish are arresting. The Pixar-like animated jungle walk is also breathtaking. But the real stars are the trees and existing plant life in the gardens, especially when lit up like creatures from Alice in Wonderland.
There are some less fascinating works, however, with lighting at some points feeling more like a cheap horror film. Some of the children going through the walk seemed more interested in patting the bums of the naked statues in the Botanical Gardens, than engaging with the lights.
Which raised an interesting question: why wasn’t more of the existing art in the Botanical Gardens like the Lysicrates Monument lit? It felt like a missed opportunity.
If you’ve got the money, the Lightscape has enough to hold your attention. But for a family, once you factor in transport, parking and food ($22 for a gozleme) it feels a bit rich. Sure the eastern view of the lit Opera House is nice but since when have we had to pay for that?
Vivid’s free light shows
From the Global Rainbow beaming the colours of the rainbow from Sydney Tower up to 40 kilometres away, to climate change warriors from the Torres Strait Island whose faces will light the Harbour Bridge pylons, the free events at Circular Quay remain a key part of Vivid.
Gumscape with road and creatures by Reg Mombassa at Customs House is bound to be a crowd pleaser. A corrugated-roofed, brick veneered-based Opera House, blow-fly engines, one eyed-koalas, surfing Holdens and Frankenstein’s kangaroos are just some of the Australian icons to appear in this Mad Max-style vision of the Aussie road trip. Using Mombassa’s 3000-strong catalogue the Spinifex Group have turned the work of the former Mambo artist into a six-minute animation.
A perennial favourite are the Opera House lights, which this year is Echo by current Archibald winner Julia Gutman. Just as she did for last year’s winning Archibald entry of singer Montaigne, Gutman has used fabric donated by her local community, to create an animated patchwork to cover the city’s calling card.
Chinese-born, Parramatta-based artist Guan Wei, combines Australian and Chinese imagery in Sea, Sand and Stars at the Museum of Contemporary Art. It journeys from astronauts in deep space to the deep sea and Bondi Beach.
Barangaroo is home this year to some of the most jaw-dropping animations including Nest by Leila Jeffreys and Melvin K. Montalban. For their fourth collaboration, the pair have created a circular structure on Stargazer Lawn where, the ritualistic graceful mating dance of the brolga plays out.
Artist Sinclair Parks’s work Stateless at Barangaroo’s Nawi Cove, is simple and silent, but probably the most powerful of all the Vivid installations. Over 4000 solar-powered LED candles represent the increasing number of stateless people around the world.
Cockle Bay’s highlight is Hika Rakuyo, the Japanese concept using flowers and falling leaves as a metaphor for the transient beauty of life. It uses Australian native flowers in an eight-minute holographic light and laser show which is on repeat from 6pm to 10.45 pm daily. Circular Quay’s 700-strong drone show, Love is in the air will only take place on June 8, 9 and 15.
The adept curation, the calibre of the artists involved and the sheer scale of the lights set alongside one of the world’s greatest harbours means that even if you eschew the paid, structured components of Vivid’s program, you will still experience one of the best, night-focused events the city has to offer.
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