
1 minute read
Reflecting on our past
Time continues beyond the third-floor space.
A few doors down at ground level is a free newsagency installation, which features historic papers and a magazine wall.
Rone’s Time is mighty special and transformative.
In my case, not only do I greatly admire the work, but it caused me to reflect on the professions of my mother and father, who have since passed on.
Both came by ship from Europe in the early ‘50s and landed jobs in a matter of days.
My dad worked for the fencing company Cyclone before studying at night school to become an accountant.
Mum was a comptometrist, a profession that is no longer. A comptometer was the forerunner to the adding machine, which – in turn – became a calculator.
Among them are a glorious floor to ceiling library with not one, but two tight, steel, spiral staircases.
Fourteen old-style manual typewriters appear on metal tables alongside weathered chairs.
Sewing machines and benches proliferate, next to a custom-built cutting table. A classroom, wooden chairs, a blackboard and books strewn about sit next to a small artist studio.
There’s a pharmacy, old bottles, signs and bric-a-brac, all carefully sourced or created anew to look old.
A mail sorting station is adjacent to a phone switchboard of yesteryear.
And the piece de resistance is a 12-metre long glasshouse overrun by creepers, the highlight of which is another large, striking mural of Teresa Oman.
Old newspapers adorn the windows of the lengthy corridor that leads from one room to the next.
All appears dusty, with cobwebs in abundance.
Those responsible for this colossus of an exhibition include set builder director Callum Preston, set decorator Carly Spooner and a team of more than 120 Victorian creatives and professionals.
But, wait, there’s more.
I dare say everyone who chooses to see this exhibition will become lost in their own thoughts … and that is just as it should be.
Rone’s Time is a work of bold creativity and dedication, just like the workers who helped make this city what it is today.
An hour is all you need to see it all, but you better get in quickly because tickets are selling fast (many days are already sold out) and the exhibition closes on April 23rd.
The entry point is close to Boost Juice in Flinders Street, opposite Elizabeth Street.
To book and get more information, go to https://rone.art