Posted on October 30, 2009 by christopbrooks
Tuesday is Melbourne Cup Day. The Melbourne Cup is known as ‘the race that stops a nation’. Even though it’s a public holiday in Melbourne Credo is still going to be open. We basically don’t want the TAB to be the only place in town for people to go and hang out.
I’ve been thinking about what [...]
Filed under: City mob, Credo, Melbourne, Melbourne (city), Urban Seed/Seeds, advertising, alcohol, animals, drugs, gambling, sport | Tagged: advertising, alcohol, beer, butterflies, drugs, gambling, gaming, Melbourne, Melbourne Cup, racing, Urban Seed | 2 Comments »
Posted on October 10, 2009 by christopbrooks
So last weekend I was down at Phillip Island for TEAR Australia’s Victoria Gathering. This year’s theme was ‘All Things in Common’. I was involved in running the ‘Hospitality and Inclusion’ workshop stream, and I was also setting up some installation art in the main auditorium and the ‘Praying in Hope’ space.
When we went down [...]
Filed under: Acts, Genesis, Phillip Island, Tear, advertising, alt worship, animation, art, city, installation art, painting and drawing, scripture | Tagged: advertising, art, Babel, city, installation, Phillip Island, prayer, public space, scaffold, Tear, tower, Urban Seed, world | 1 Comment »
Posted on July 6, 2009 by christopbrooks
This morning (Sunday) I took Mike and Rachel C to St Nicholas’ Antiochian Orthodox Church. (The others went to St Michael’s and CSBC.) I really like going to St Nicholas’. Mike was saying that it’s like stepping into 2000 years of history. He said that everything seemed so unfamiliar, but it was also clear that [...]
Filed under: CSBC, City mob, Melbourne, Melbourne (city), Mission Exposure, Urban Seed/Seeds, advertising, church, city, environment, food, homelessness, weddings | Tagged: #me09, advertising, blankets, church, city, Collins Street Baptist Church, Eritrea, Green Collect, homelessness, Jesus, Melbourne, neighbourhood, orthodox, poverty, Seeds, Urban Seed, wedding | Leave a Comment »
Posted on May 17, 2009 by christopbrooks
Saw this yesterday and thought it was funny:
Filed under: advertising | Tagged: advertising, breakup, culturejamming | 1 Comment »
Posted on May 13, 2009 by christopbrooks
Anyone know anything about this?
I think the same billboard used to advertise a strip-joint.
Filed under: Melbourne, Melbourne (city), advertising, city, mobile phones | Tagged: 19 SMS GOD, advertising, billboard, city, God, Melbourne, mobile phone, SMS, text message | 2 Comments »
Posted on April 9, 2009 by christopbrooks
At Pain in the Arts today I was thinking about ideas for the TEAR conference. I started asking the others, ‘If you had a billboard, what would you put on it?’ I ended up writing their responses on the tower in my sketch below:
The stuff written at the bottom are the responses I got to [...]
Filed under: Credo, Indigenous Hospitality House, Pain in the Arts, Tear, Urban Seed/Seeds, advertising, art, city, drugs, homelessness, indigenous Australians, painting and drawing, tobacco | Tagged: advertising, art, billboard, city, drawing, hypothetical, sketch, Tear | Leave a Comment »
Posted on April 8, 2009 by christopbrooks
Posted on February 28, 2009 by christopbrooks
My response to Friday’s Lenten Lectionary reading:
Filed under: Exodus, Lent, Lenten Lectionary 2009, advertising, art, consumerism, mixed media, scripture | Tagged: advertising, art, Coca Cola, Coke, Lent, Moses, red, red and white, water, white | 1 Comment »
Posted on February 11, 2009 by christopbrooks
This is an animation about the unburned bush, which I produced for ‘Prayers for Melbourne’ at Collins Street Baptist Church, last week. I tried to upload it after I used it, but I had to work out how to make Vimeo videos work in WordPress. Then after the weekend I didn’t know if it was [...]
Filed under: Black Saturday bushfires, Exodus, advertising, alt worship, art, church, city, mixed media, prayer, scripture | Tagged: advertising, alt worship, animation, Bible, Burning Bush, Exodus, fires, flames, Moses, power, prayer, scripture, tabloids, Torah | Leave a Comment »