Monday, 15 December 2025

Antarctic Arts Fellowship allows artists to develop works on the ice.

Extract from ABC News

Leila Jeffreys sits side on to the camera and holds her camera to her eye.

Leila Jeffreys says "magic happens in Antarctica". (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

In short:

The Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship gives creatives the chance to travel south and develop works on the icy continent.

The program has been running since 1984, with bird photographer Leila Jeffreys and moving image artist Polly Stanton the latest to embark on the creative journey.

What's next?

Expressions of interest for next year's Antarctic Arts Fellowship open today, with applications due by the end of January.

Photographing penguins in Antarctica (Supplied: Polly Stanton)

Multimedia artist captures 'edge of the world' spaces

Joining her in Antarctica this season is audio-visual artist Polly Stanton, who also received a fellowship.

"I think what's really struck me being here is just how immense it is and almost how it is so incredibly dreamlike," Stanton said.

"I understand why it really affects people."

Polly Stanton wears black and fluorescent yellow snow gear and stands next to a camera on a tripod on the ice in Antarctica.

Polly Stanton is planning to create a large-scale multimedia work. (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

Stanton focuses her work on "contested spaces", where human impacts intersect with the natural world, such as mining sites.

In Antarctica, she's capturing sound and moving images at Casey Station, including its generator and incinerator.

She's also filmed the abandoned Wilkes Station, which is littered with waste from the 1960s.

"I'm really interested in environments sort of on the edge of the world in remote places," she said.

"And how people survive in those sorts of spaces, what they create, what they do in those spaces, and also what they leave behind."

The sun rises over Australian Antarctic base, Casey Station.

Casey Station is the largest of Australia's three bases in Antarctica. (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

Stanton plans to create a large-scale moving image work based on her experiences in Antarctica, the first iteration of which will be exhibited in Melbourne next year.

"It's an absolute privilege to be here," she said.

"It's not a space that many people get to experience and the Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship is really, for an artist, the most logical way to have a chance to come here".

Polly Stanton wears black and fluorescent yellow snow gear and kneels behind a camera on a tripod on the ice in Antarctica.

Polly Stanton focuses on "contested spaces", where humans interact with the natural environment. (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

Applications open for next year's fellowship

The fellowship program has been running since 1984.

Over that time, more than 80 artists have travelled to Australia's Antarctic and sub-Antarctic stations, or joined a voyage on the national icebreaker.

Annalise Rees sits on a rock and looks off to the side. Water and sea ice are visible in the background.

Annalise Rees says the Antarctic Arts Fellowship is open to all types of creatives. (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

Annalise Rees, the assistant director of arts and education engagement at the Australian Antarctic Division, manages the program.

"We've had performance works, sound works, there's been a lot of visual arts, writing, literature, books published," she said.

"We've even had a harpist on the ice [and] there's been a dancer.

"The works are quite varied."

Alice Giles sits with her harp on the ice in Antarctica.

Harpist Alice Giles was an Antarctic arts fellow in 2011. (Supplied: Glenn Jacobson/Australian Antarctic Division)

Philip Samartzis kneels on the ice behind a microphone with a large fluffy wind sock on it.

Philip Samartzis recording at Trajer Ridge near Davis Station in 2015 as part of the arts fellowship program. (Supplied: David Atkins/Australian Antarctic Division)

Dr Rees said when the works were exhibited in Australia and abroad, it helped deepen the understanding of the Antarctic region for people who've never been able to travel there themselves.

"Art, I think, plays an important role in building connection because it both intellectually and emotionally connects us to something that we may not directly have experienced," she said.

"And that is Antarctica for most people."

A pen and ink drawing of a red building and two green vehicles in a sketchbook.

Annalise Rees works on an artwork at Casey Station. (ABC News: Jano Gibson)

Fellows are selected through a competitive process, with about 150 people applying last year.

Expressions of interest for next year's Antarctic Arts Fellowship open today, with applications due by the end of January.

The ABC travelled to Antarctica with the support of the Australian Antarctic Program.

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