Sweet Child of Mine (Melbourne Festival)

 Sweet Child of Mine is for anyone whose parents don’t understand what they do (yes Mum, I’m still doing some writing) and for parents who don’t know why their artist offspring don’t want a steady job.

  MELBOURNE FRINGE 2011
Presented by: the Battens and The Last Tuesday SocietyVenue: Studio 246, Brunswick Wednesday, 28 September, 2011

Sweet Child of MineSweet Child of Mine is for anyone whose parents don’t understand what they do (yes Mum, I’m still doing some writing) and for parents who don’t know why their artist offspring don’t want a steady job.
Jim and Linda Batten have six children; one, Bron, left their Warrnambool home to study contemporary dance and drama. 
Jim and Linda love their daughter Bron. Melbourne’s independent-cool-arty-farty-hipsters (and reviewers) love Bron’s hilarious and subversive art. Jim and Linda like beautiful art that makes sense and doesn’t have nudity or bad language. So what do they make of a daughter who understands post structuralism, danced a chicken abortion in an empty swimming pool and has spent a lot of time in a blue sleeping bag pretending to be a whale?
They perform this show together, on film and on stage.
Jim Batten is the star of this Melbourne Fringe. As scantily-clad Bron swirls around in symbolic white chiffon smock and practical Bonds underwear, Jim tells us what it’s like to be the dad of an artist and, on film, Bron asks of Jim and Linda to tell her what they think she does. 
Apparently contemporary art isn’t clear to everyone and artists are known to have unreliable incomes. 
Linda and Jim Batten like art that has some emotional kick to it, that’s uplifting, that is understood and makes an impression. 
So they’re pretty lucky to be in a show that ticks every single box. And it has obscure references, a beaver, bad language and blue paint for the rest of us!
But is it art?
(Word that Linda doesn’t like) yes!  to 1 October  
More of Anne-Marie’s writing is at sometimesmelbourne.blogspot.com

Anne-Marie Peard

Anne-Marie spent many years working with amazing artists at arts festivals all over Australia. She's been a freelance arts writer for the last 10 years and teaches journalism at Monash University.

Anne-Marie Peard

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