Showing posts with label The Travellers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Travellers. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Cruise, Tom

Just The Ticket For A View Of Melbourne

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


With the weather warming up, the cruise vessels down the Yarra River get proportionally busier. When we first came to live in Melbourne 20 years ago, there were four months of daylight saving every year, from the last weekend of October to the first weekend of March.


Things have changed now. It was decided a few years ago to extend daylight saving until the end of March. And this year, for the first time, daylight saving began on the first weekend of October so we now have long daylight hours for exactly half the year.

Back in 2000, when Sydney hosted the Olympics, we actually went into daylight saving at the start of September, specifically because of the Games. So there's an interesting piece of Olympic trivia that you might not have known.

Oh, and here's another Olympic story - when Melbourne hosted the 1956 Games, the equestrian events were actually held in Stockholm, Sweden, because of Australia's strict quarantine laws.


The move towards longer daylight hours is good news for tour operators and for the restaurants that make this city famous. It was a warm, sunny afternoon when I took these shots. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ll just go and grab a ticket for myself …..


By the way, if you're wondering about the huge silver figures that grace the diagonal bridge in the background of this shot (above) let me tell you they are an integral part of this city's multicultural background. The figures pay homage to those who left their homelands to live here, in this sunburnt country.

The story of the huge figures that actually move up and down the length of the disused Sandridge Rail Bridge is detailed in a previous post I wrote, and can be found at Action Figures.

Visit the creative team behind That's MyWorld Tuesday.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Action Figures

The Travellers Come From Many Lands

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


With the brilliant blue skies we had on Wednesday, I thought it was a perfect opportunity to give you a Sky Watch Friday post that takes you to the heart of Melbourne, both visually and culturally. As you can see by the photograph above, the quality of light was so strong that the shadows were almost summer-like in their clarity and definition.

These striking metal figures - called The Travellers and designed by Nadim Karam and Atelier Hapsitus - are several metres high and they are a terrific barometer of Melbourne's fickle weather. In cloudy or overcast conditions, the figures look gun-metal grey, but in sunny weather, they cast a unique silvery gleam. So on Wednesday, as the clouds began to clear at lunchtime, The Travellers were at their shiny metallic best.

They stand on the old Sandridge Bridge and they tell a tale of many lands, many races, many bold ventures by migrants who left their native shores and journeyed to this sunburnt country. As a migrant myself, I find they are a wonderful expression of pride, reflecting this city's multi-cultural heritage.

The Sandridge Bridge was built in 1888, the first metal bridge across the Yarra River. It was a rail bridge and it ran diagonally across the river, forming an important link between Port Melbourne and the new city that was part of John Batman’s great vision.

When the bridge was decommissioned in 1987, a year before I came to live in Melbourne, it fell into disrepair. Several points of view were aired on what should be done with the bridge and in 2006, just before the opening of the Commonwealth Games here in Melbourne, the refurbished bridge was unveiled.

The bridge is now a walkway and there are 128 glass panels on either side that commemorate each nation from which people migrated to Melbourne. The individual glass panels can be seen in the photo above and each has the name of a country emblazoned on it. But the piece de resistance, without doubt, is the nine giant steel sculptures named The Travellers. Three times each day, the huge figures slide soundlessly back and forward across the bridge.

Shortly after they were unveiled, I walked across the bridge to stand under their shadow while each traversed the huge span of the bridge. There is nothing more than a muted whirring as each figure slides seamlessly into place and the others follow in a parade of quiet majesty.

Each figure represents the different waves of settlers, from the early convicts to the Gold Rush-era prospectors, as well as the refugees and the modern professionals.


And what, you might well ask, of this land's most ancient inhabitants? There is a tenth figure (above) built on a giant plinth, that is stationary on the south bank of the river. It represents Victoria's Aboriginal communities, for whom this spot by the life-sustaining river was a traditional meeting place.

Migrants no longer cross this historic bridge. Migrants no longer make a many-layered journey across this historic stretch of water. But The Travellers, who traverse it instead, remind us all - every one of us - how boldly we strode from the lands of our birth to come here.


For other participants in Dot’s concept, go to Sky Watch Friday.