Making Noise

My Personal Time Capsule

Beekeepers

Beautiful Noise? I guess you’d say it started with a flower…

Posted by | Bee Friendly Installation, Beekeepers, Broadford Paper Mill, Music, Set Design | 2 Comments

 

I certainly do have a paper fetish, I guess you’d say it started with a flower…

But now that I think of it…

No.

It started with music, and then I noticed the bees and other insects were collapsing.

My whole life I’ve been following threads. Inspirational threads that come to me out of the blue like the smell of fresh baked cookies waft from the kitchen enticing my taste buds to sit down with a large jug of milk. Invisible threads beckon me. They are extremely successful in wooing me; serving up tasty visions of possibilities along an invisible corridor that may take decades to land me in the kitchen of life’s accomplishments.

The threads that I follow are just that, threads of inspiration.

They call to me, sparking my imagination to see possibilities I had never seen before nor dreamed possible. They give me vibrant energy to envision the end result and the power to persevere no matter what.

In 2014, seeing a book called, Trail – Paper Poetry by David Pelham for the first time was a massive inspiration for me. An intricate sophisticated pop-up book it caused me to ask a question, “What if we could design a pop-up set of the natural world out of paper, and how about a cd cover?”

I bought six of David’s books, and took three of them apart to better understand how they were put together, and how exactly the various sections worked. With his book, I created my own template and redesigned the individual parts to create my own popup experience, with the desire to create a large one for a record jacket when I pressed vinyl for It’s All a Beautiful Noise.

You could say, I became obsessed…

From this, I learned how to create a pop-up flower inside my cd cover with a future thread of employing six smart phone augmented reality animations for people to play with. Click here to see what Mattar is doing with augmented reality.

This in turn, inspired me to start playing with paper on a bigger scale – life-size paper animals that lay flat on the stage and are popped up at certain times during the show. And then, over a year of working with that idea, I came across a simple canon-creative park website that has a massive selection of small three dimensional paper animals. I was inspired to explore blowing up some of the designs into life-size paper animals as a stand-alone installation that could go up before my show came to town. I thought it could act as advertising and bee centric activities could be its central focus.

But the question became, where does one find paper big enough to make a life-size elephant or a giraffe? I had no idea.

I’ve learned life is a treasure hunt, and it comes when one commits to following invisible threads of desire. It can turn getting lost on a back road out of Melbourne heading to Sydney into a magic act!

This is my story…

Driving through some beautiful landscapes on a cool cloudy day with no cell service trying to find the Hume Hwy, I came across the 126 year old Broadford Paper Mill with its big factory doors wide open. I spotted it right before the hwy turn off.  It’s fun to reflect on the fact that we were in Melbourne just the night before to have dinner with my booking agent at the time. I knew he was friends with someone at Visy and I asked him if he could hook me up. Visy, if you don’t know manufactures recycled paper and other products.

The beautiful people at the mill (NPI) would provide me with two unused spaces in their factory for several years and unlimited amounts of paper to work out my paper animal prototypes. Whilst at the factory, I would fall in love with Visy paper and make many animals out of their product. Thank you a million times, thank you!

The Music

You see, the nasty little secret is, It’s All a Beautiful Noise was meant to be an album of music no one would want to buy.

Now, I know that sounds crazy, but let me tell you it was necessary.

At the time, my intention was to throw a bone to a gangster record company who had licensed my Keep the Faith record for the US, Canada, the UK and Japan to protect an album of music I had finished recording – Citizens of the Planet – from being pirated. They were in breech of contract for illegally selling distribution rights to two European distributor. They did not account for the amount of money they received or number of units sold, as was stipulated in the contract. In the end, they did not stop selling my album for the next several years. When I called the president of the company and asked him why he was not complying, he said, “Sue us.”

He knew I had no money to take him to court. And I knew that Citizens of the Planet and its state-of-the-art production would be very successful internationally. I had the radio songs and I had the production values, and most importantly, I knew they were not men and women of their word, and if they smelled money, I could count on them tying me up in court to get at it.

I had two options; one was to wait several years till the original contract and their right of first refusal was no longer a threat, or create a new album of songs – an album no one would want.

There was one little tiny problem, I fell in love with the music Mik and I began to write and produce. And, I can truly say the music I created with Mik Lavage would change me forever. It would open me up to greater creative threads of possibilities – Global First Threads – with a deeper purpose than just being about at a time when its needed the most.

Future Self Inspiration

I will never pretend to understand the full mystery of how life works, where we come from and where we go when we die. All I can say is the instrumental musical compositions Mik presented me with opened a portal – connecting ever deeper – to my future-self.  A future-self I met in a dream when I was 21.

 

When I was 21 years old, I had a dream.

It was either the morning I turned 21, or the morning after I turned 21.

I can never remember,

so I always have to start the story this way.

 

In the dream, I’m standing with my hands on a stone balustrade in front of a French Chateau in the Hollywood Hills, which you can do in the Hollywood Hills, and you can do in a dream.

In the dream the sun had set and from where I stood, I looked down on the San Fernando Valley just as the city lights came online, section by section across the valley. I’d never seen that before.

It was a crystal-clear night; not a cloud in the sky. In front of me, in the distance, was the sharp crisp silhouette of the Angela Crest Mountain range against a massive backdrop of orange. I remember, I had to look straight up into the sky above me to see where the massive bandwidth of orange stopped and a Maxfield Parrish Turquoise Blue kicked in, and the first star appeared.

It was the time of the year when the sun goes down you can feel the crisp bite of the air on your cheeks, and the smell of damp earth as the evening dew is absorbed into the ground.

I find myself basking in the beautiful moment, and then laughter catches my attention. I turn around to look behind me. And I see two very tall narrow French doors. Inside is a full-blown Hollywood party. People are laughing and drinking and smoking and being all-fabulous. I don’t want to go inside, I just want drink in this stunning moment. But as I turn to look back at the view, I notice someone out of the corner of my eye – to the right of the far-right door.

It’s a woman… and she’s floating a foot off the ground. She has no clothes on and she has no hair on her body. And her body, is like a jellyfish… she’s like a combination Box Jellyfish /Gecko. What I mean by that is her breasts and muscle pads in her arms and legs and neck are clear like a Box Jellyfish, but her torso has the transparency of a Gecko. I can see her ovaries and her heart pounding inside her breast. I become so caught up in her anatomy that I totally forget this is a woman, and then when I finally do look into her eyes I freak out!!

“Don’t be afraid,” I heard her say, but her lips didn’t move.

“Are you speaking inside my head?”

She said, “When you reach a certain level in your human development, you’ll no longer be afraid to allow people to know what you think or feel.”

I thought for a moment. “That sounds true”

“Who are you?”

She leaned in and looked at me with loving kind eyes, “I’m your future self!”

And I woke up.

That was a rad dream. Meeting my future self all those years ago gave me a trajectory – a star on the distant horizon to point my inner compass toward. I have now shared this dream with people in more than 20 countries around the world. I believe Mik’s music created a portal for my future self to come through. The impact of this story, and experiencing the effect some of the songs on Beautiful Noise has on people is really something special to experience.

In the show, I share my dream moment in a more dynamic way by allowing my future self to come to life. I give my future self the opportunity to sing (More on that in another blog post.) and talk directly to the audience. She see us differently than we do. she trusts us to make the exact choices we need to make to restore balance.

#tonichildshive #beebeauty #BeeLove #BeeAware #10000Beekeepers #beekeepersofinstagram #beekeepers #bees #beeswax #yearofthebee #savethebee

 

My 8.5 Meter Bee Prototype Goes Up in Katherine at the Godinymayin Yijard River Arts & Culture Centre GYRACC

Posted by | Bee Friendly Installation, Beekeepers | No Comments

In Katherine in the Northern Territory….

my big 8.5 Meter Bee Friendly prototype goes up at GTRACC.  For many years I have been exploring different types of installations that could be made out of paper for 30 Bee Friendly installations. These installations will launch three months of Bee centric activities as a part of my new show called, It’s All a Beautiful Noise (IAABN).

The three months of activities are inspired by visiting the Bees BIG IDEA project and visual arts exhibition in Sun Valley, Idaho. Click the link to view the type of community activities we will be curating. https://issuu.com/sunvalleycenterforthearts/docs/bees.final_web

Watching how bee populations around the world have been disappearing, and learning that their immune systems are compromised by chemicals and lack of foraging, I was inspired to create a groundswell of support for our pollinators, and the local beekeepers – who are the real Rock Stars on the planet by creating ‘spectacle community experiences’ to start a conversation:

What does a bee friendly community look like?

What does a bee friendly household look like?

What does a bee friendly farm look like?

What are the things our town can do to make it Bee Friendly?

I am so grateful to my good friend Jo Gillies at Archisoul Architects for supporting my vision to build a Bee. Jo enlisted her student Harrrison Dumesich to work with me on my design! Thank you, Jo and Harrison, I could not have done it without you both. It means so much that you were both able to travel to Katherine and build the bee with me. I also need to say, a very special thank you to Rhan Cain. Thank you beautiful man for your super hero support. And a very special thank you to Rob Stoneham for your continued support!

One never knows when creating something physical for the first time if it’s going to work, particularly out of materials you’ve never worked with before. A lot can go wrong, but in our case it all went right. Harrison designed our bee using a CAD program. Our bee is made from recycled card;  2 – 16mm thick white card glued to the outside of a 30mm card to meet our specifications. The 27 glued sheets were then shipped to Darwin where the various sections and pieces that make up the bee were then cut out on a CNC Router. A special thank you to Brad Sisson SignCityNT in Darwin who cut our bee, and Brad Hugget at Rebul in Melbourne who supplied the card!

A thousand kisses to everyone who made it possible!

What an amazing feeling it is to see people engage with our bee. I love touching it and walking inside it. It was absolutely delightful watching little kids jump in and out of the butt of the bee! Fun! Of course there are tweaks that need to be made to design, like the wings and the bolts. The wings are too small and the bolts too big and bulky. Both Harrison and myself were a little too conservative with the wings. But no matter, we now know what needs to be done to make it perfect.

Assembling it with Harrison and Jo after putting after months of work into the design was pure gold… needless to say we celebrated with a nice bottle of Prosecco!!

We designed the bee so it could easily be put together like IKEA flat packed furniture. My brief: I want Bee Friendly to be something local galleries and their communities can build together effortlessly. It must be constructed out of lightweight materials, easy to handle, simple to put together, and include easy to read instructions and discreet connecting identification tags, and recyclable. And, because our bees will traveling overseas, reusable.

We did it! So fricken excited to come this far.

 Next Steps…

Our prototype will now travel to Melbourne where it will sit in storage until October, when we start the silkworm portion of the installation during Mulberry season. There will be a lot to learn in October, I am really looking forward to it. Inspired by Neri Oxman’s Silk Dome project, You can click the Neri’s name to watch the silkworms weave the her dome.

If you’d like to know more about how you can be involved, please do not hesitate to reach out.

Here’s what went out to the press:

International Recording Artist Toni Childs invites the Katherine Community in the Northern Territory to experience her 8.5 meter bee installation called, Bee Friendly. Toni has been working on the design with Sydney based Architects, Archisoul Archisoul to design a bee you can walk inside and share how we can create Bee Friendly communities.

The Bee featured this Wed evening is the prototype for 30 – 8.5M bees that will be installed in Regional Australian towns at the end of 2023, launching three months of bee centric activities while 300,000 silkworms weave the the skin of 30 bees.

https://www.katherinetimes.com.au/story/7261508/toni-childs-bee-friendly-movement-takes-flight-from-gyraac/

#tonichildshive #beebeauty #BeeLove#BeeAware #10000Beekeepers#beekeepersofinstagram #beekeepers #bees#beeswax #yearofthebee  #savethebee

 

I’d like to introduce you to a few Australian BeeKeepers… put the kettle on, and take a moment to have a listen their concerns for the bee and thoughts about the importance of a Beekeeper’s Survey

Posted by | Beekeepers | No Comments

Doug Purdey Sydney’ Botanical Gardens Beekeeper

 

It was 2012 in the background of my busy life, I first heard bees were disappearing in the US and other places around the world. Quite honestly, I didn’t actually give it much notice at the time. I got married early that year and moved to Australia. However, each year, I would see more and more Facebook posts about ‘Bee Collapse’, and the loud booming voice from Biotech companies denying their chemicals have anything to do with it and could not be proved.

In 2014, I began recording a new album of music called, It’s All a Beautiful Noise. In 2015, I was moved to start developing a 3D mapping show of the same name to celebrate the bee and our pollinators. Realising one night’s performance would not be enough to inspire action, and seeing this as an incredibly important issue for our world, I began to consider ways to create spectacle and more audience engagement to inspire actionable-care for the bee.

In 2016, this led me to start to develop an eco-friendly installation that would launch three months of bee centric activities in regional farming communities where the bee is employed. This is the start of what would become ‘Bee Friendly’.

As I embarked on my journey, I needed to understand more about what was actually happening to the bee.  The US organisation ‘Bee Informed’ lists beekeepers loss at 44 percent of bees in 2015/16. As I dug deeper into the cause of collapsing bee colonies in the US, Canada and Europe, I learned more about the cascading effects. In an article written by Morgan Erickson-Davis 27 October 2017, Morgan brings to our attention some sobering facts. Needs must, I can see it is time to meet this head on and do whatever it takes to create a ‘Bee Friendly’ world! Click on here to read Morgan’s article.

75% of insects have disappeared in Germany over the past 27 years, with new

collections from midsummer showing an even bigger reduction –- 82 percent.

This drop has affected Germany’s bird population – 15% of the birds are dying

because their food supply is disappearing.

Morgan’s article and many others, galvanises the focus of my new musical production into a deeper level of action. I realised we needed to unite the beekeepers – the protector of the bee.

At the end of 2017, I began to reach out to Australian Beekeeper Associations to learn more about what Beekeepers are concerned about in Australia. I wondered, do they have the same worries and concerns beekeepers do in the US, Canada and Europe? I had a long, warm and very informative chat with Secretary of Brisbane Beekeepers Association – Elise Whittaker, daughter of former Biosecurity Officer and President of Brisbane Beekeepers Association, and author of ‘The Bee Book’, a book I’m told is considered ‘The Bible’ for beekeepers in Australia.

After meeting up several times with Elise, I learned the ins and outs of Beekeeper Associations in Australia and the challenges they face going forward: like the lack of funding to up-date important historical records into a modern nation database; the hermit like tendencies that can prevent old school beekeepers engaging with each other, and the new crop, of backyard beekeepers; the countless new backyard beekeepers who are not connected with local beekeeper associations and are out of the loop in terms of understanding how to identify pests and disease, and most importantly the lack of biosecurity officers in each state.

When asking Elise how she thought we could bring beekeepers together, she suggested a survey. As Secretary of the Brisbane’s Beekeeper Assoc, she could see for sometime the value a beekeepers survey could bring to her association and the other beekeeping associations across Australia. This was Elise’s secret passion waiting to be pollinated at the time.

At the end of 2017, Elise Whittaker, Laree Thorsby (BM Tour Coordinator), and myself began creating a ‘Year of the Bee’ Beekeepers Survey. Our aim is to give beekeepers the opportunity to add to the survey, whilst bringing backyard beekeepers and commercial beekeepers together to unite the beekeepers of Australia, and start a Big Bee Friendly Conversation. If your a beekeeper in Australia click and the link, participate and share with beekeepers you know. horturl.at/rEGLQ

Our survey gave me a platform to begin reaching out to Australian Beekeepers for interviews – to learn what their thoughts and concerns are regarding bee health and their thoughts about uniting beekeepers with a survey. I am excited to introduce you to a few beekeepers and honey producers here in Australia who would like to share their concerns with you and their personal thoughts on the need for a national beekeepers survey!

Little did I know these initial series of interviews would seed a full-blown beekeeper breakfast tour of Australia, which reached full steam in 2019.


I am presently reaching out to beekeepers in Australia and asking them to answer and contribute questions to a Beekeepers Survey to us help understand what the biggest concerns are for their community. The Year of the Bee Interviews aim to bring Beekeepers around the world together to mobilize efforts to protect and improve the health of the bees and pollinators across all borders! I plan to tour across Australia meeting with beekeepers and beekeepers California in 2019.

If your a beekeeper in Australia, please click out link and participate. shorturl.at/rEGLQ FYI: We are not attached to any corporation who has invested self interests in controlling outcomes of this survey.

I want to make this the year of the Bee! I am on a mission to gather 10,000 Beekeepers to join my effort to make a big beautiful noise for our pollinators!! Send us an email to learn more at theyearofthebee@tonichilds.com

Europe Insect Decline UpDate March 18, 2018 

‘Catastrophe’ as France’s bird population collapses due to pesticides

Dozens of species have seen their numbers decline, in some cases by two-thirds, because insects they feed on have disappeared. 

Bird populations across the French countryside have fallen by a third over the last decade and a half, researchers have said. Dozens of species have seen their numbers decline, in some cases by two-thirds, the scientists said in a pair of studies – one national in scope and the other covering a large agricultural region in central France.

“The situation is catastrophic,” said Benoit Fontaine, a conservation biologist at France’s National Museum of Natural History and co-author of one of the studies “Our countryside is in the process of becoming a veritable desert,” he said in a communique released by the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), which also contributed to the findings.

The common white throat, the ortolan bunting, the Eurasian skylark and other once-ubiquitous species have all fallen off by at least a third, according a detailed, annual census initiated at the start of the century. A migratory song bird, the meadow pipit, has declined by nearly 70%. The museum described the pace and extent of the wipe-out as “a level approaching an ecological catastrophe”

#tonichildshive #beebeauty #BeeLove#BeeAware #10000Beekeepers#beekeepersofinstagram #beekeepers #bees#beeswax #yearofthebee  #savethebee