Tromarama <br/>
(Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans and Ruddy Hatumena)<br/>
Zsa Zsa Zsu 2007 (still)<br/>
stop motion animation with buttons and beads<br/>
colour, 4 min 42 sec<br/>
Song by RNRM<br/>
Collection of the artists<br/>
© Tromarama
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Tromarama 
(Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans and Ruddy Hatumena)
Media Release • 8 May 15

Open House: Tromarama for Kids

A wondrous and immersive house of fun has been built in the gallery, where furniture hangs from the ceiling, pink flamingos talk and cheeky garden gnomes chat back in Open House: Tromarama for Kids (23 May – 18 October), at the dedicated children’s galleries at NGV International.

The house features five fully-furnished rooms – a kitchen, dining room, courtyard, bedroom and bathroom – and will be centred around nine imaginative video works, which show ordinary household objects coming to life in extraordinary and playful ways. Created by Indonesian contemporary art collective Tromarama (Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans and Ruddy Hatumena), this rich and experiential exhibition is a follow up to the hugely successful Express Yourself! Romance Was Born for Kids, which attracted 85,000 children to NGV International.

Using everyday objects such as lamps, shoes, buttons and crockery, Tromarama create stop-motion animation videos with a ‘kidult’ approach. These films are created in the spirit of play and imagination, yet explore in-depth themes such as identity, materialism, consumer culture and the natural versus the artificial. Each video is the result of hundreds of hours of work painstakingly moving thousands of objects as part of complex stop -motion animation process, where it can take up to 3 months to create a four minute film.

In addition to the humorous and thought-provoking video works, the interiors of each room will include participatory multimedia elements for young visitors to experience. In the courtyard section of the installation, familiar garden ornaments and infrastructure including a gnome, drain pipes and a tree stump will ‘chat back’ after recording the visitor’s own voice. A large-scale feature wall of colourful flowers in the courtyard will frame the compelling video work, Nothing Is What It Seems, which captures time passing where fresh flowers bloom and die to reveal the video’s title phrase in artificial blooms, commenting on the blurry lines of artificiality and reality in contemporary culture.

Tony Ellwood, Director, NGV, said, ‘In Open House: Tromarama for Kids play and art come together, encouraging children to express their creativity and ignite their imaginations. This exhibition builds on the success of our recent children’s exhibition Express Yourself! Romance Was Born for Kids, which attracted 85,000 children to NGV International and as the 10 day Children’s festival, which attracted more than 14,000 children across both NGV International and NGV Australia earlier this year.’

Children can dance in the upside-down Dining Room, where tables and chairs will be suspended from the roof and dancing on the ‘ceiling’ is encouraged. Soundtracks in Tromarama’s video works Everyone is Everybody, 2012, and Wattt?!, 2010, complement the dance floor experience. The film Wattt?! shows a mischievous desk lamp throwing an all-night party with his other object friends – the artists’ ‘kidult’ response to the time they received an exorbitant electricity bill.

In the kitchen, the film Ting*, 2008, shows a group of audacious cups, mugs and plates abandoning their dull lives in the kitchen cupboard, in search of adventure. The crockery forms a choreographed chorus line, which is accompanied by a soundtrack of tinkling porcelain. Three white mugs represent the artists themselves, and the video conveys the artists’ feelings of missing out on their ‘playtime’ and lamenting their time in the office.
In the bathroom, Pilgrimage, 2011 features a large cast of unlikely animated objects, from a scrubbing brush to a hot pink flamingo, rotating in endless circles in an attempt to explain some of life’s big questions.

To further enhance the experience for children, Tromarama has collaborated with the NGV to develop Tromaramix – a new stop motion app which can be used inside the exhibition and at home. Children can use a variety of toys in stop-motion booths positioned inside the exhibition to create their own animation, which can then be shared with friends and family.

Minister for Creative Industries, Martin Foley, said, ‘This rich and imaginative exhibition is a playful introduction into the world of contemporary art. As well as having fun and interesting artworks to look at, and be inspired by, the exhibition enables children and their families to have a go at being artists themselves. It’s one of the many ways the NGV is opening up art to people of all ages, fostering creativity and inspiring our next generation.’

Coinciding with the exhibition, the NGV Design Store has collaborated with Tromarama to publish a flipbook featuring imagery from Tromarama’s 2011 work Pilgrimage, from the NGV collection. Created especially for children, the palm-sized book captures the magic of stop-motion animation, revealing moving images actually comprised of a series of static pictures, which when played at speed create the illusory effect of motion. Tromarama’s paper version of two extracts from their film will delight children and adults alike as they watch a birthday cake’s candles flicker and melt, or flipped the opposite way, an inflatable shark toy swimming in circles on a Persian carpet.

NGV Teens Public Program:
Meet the Artists on Sunday 24 May, 2 – 3pm, $13 Students.
This workshop for students includes learning about Tromarama’s stop-motion practice and their exhibition as well as creating a stop-motion animation together with the artists.

Open House: Tromarama for Kids is at NGV International from 23 May – 18 October 2015. Free entry. Visit ngv.vic.gov.au for further information.

Biography

Tromarama (Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans and Ruddy Hatumena) formed in 2006 in Bandung, Indonesia. The three artists graduated from the prestigious Institute Technology of Bandung. Ready-made objects from daily life are often their tools to tell the story. Most of their works are based on video animation, sound and installation. In 2010, they held their first solo exhibition at Mori Art Museum called: MAM PROJECT 012: Tromarama. Their video installation of 2006, Serigala Militia is now part of the collection of the Mori Art Museum, Japan. Tromarama has participated in the Singapore Biennale (2008), Philagrafika: The Graphic Unconscious, Philadelphia, USA (2010), VideoZone V, The 5th International Video Art Biennial, Tel Aviv, Israel (2010), 3rd Asian Art Biennial, Taiwan (2011) and The 7th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Brisbane (2012). They have also taken part in video screening festivals such as A Window to the World, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Japan (2009), Long Night of the Austrian Museums, Kunsthalle Wien, Austria (2010), Roppongi Art Night, Tokyo (2012) and Animasivo Animation Festival, Mexico City (2013).

Supporters
The NGV wishes to acknowledge the Dewhurst Family and the Truby & Florence Williams Charitable Trust for their generous support of Open House: Tromarama For Kids.

Download media release here