Browse Calendar: November 08 Browse Calendar: December 08

THE ARC EXPERIENCE - ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN

NFSA's headquarters were built as the Institute of Anatomy in 1930, with two double-storey exhibition halls built for the presentation of anatomical specimens and ethnographic collections. A lecture hall seating 120 people was also built at the same time. NFSA moved to the building in 1984, and was immediately faced with the issue of having no screening facility.

Over the next 20 years, video emerged as a screening option. The NFSA established film projection facilities in the lecture theatre, although these did not meet the standards of even a regular cinema. Miniature screening spaces were established on occasion, including an evocation of the State Theatre in Sydney, where newsreels were screened on video.

THE SPARK

Proposals were explored to build a new free-standing cinema elsewhere on the NFSA site, but converting one of the original exhibition halls into a cinema remained an ongoing temptation. In 2005, the NFSA hosted Mr Chapin Cutler, of Boston Sound and Light (www.blsi.com/) who encouraged NFSA to turn temptation into reality. Formal approvals were set in place and a construction team was established led by NFSA co-project managers Trevor Anderson and Peter Callow, along with Solve Design, Graham O'Neil and Associates, Neil Le Quesne and Associates, Jands and Atlab.

THE VISION

The final piece in the creative puzzle of what has become Arc is Santa Fébased theatre designer and artist Garry Transue. Garry visited NFSA in April, 2006 with an invitation to create an inspired, cutting-edge interior design including lighting and soundscapes. Garry spent a week immersed with NFSA staff, along with an early exposure to the Australian landscape, and a sliver of the way Australians live. He was especially taken with the Australian habit of shortening names wherever possible, often with a laconic and humorous twist.

Garry first presented his vision of a new cinema called 'Arc' to NFSA Director Paolo Cherchi Usai on two A2 sized pieces of artist's sketch paper using a combination of decorative design and text.

In part, the text reads: "Arc, short for archive, describing a trajectory - a path of conductivity from past to future, from old to new, known to unknown, from where the NFSA has been to where it is headed. An arc occurs between two poles and creates a bridge of current. The name also refers to projectors of old which used carbon arc light sources.Arc is short and succinct, suggesting a charged environment, full of energy and the spark of creativity."

Garry had become 'Gaz' during his week in Australia, and the Archive had inspired 'Arc'.

Garry went on to describe in detail his vision for a lighting system, plus screen and soundscapes, that would both communicate the vision of Arc, and powerfully draw out the existing arc deco features of what would become the new cinema space a space dedicated to the sharing and inspiration of the art, history and appreciation of cinema.