When the Sydney Opera House was first mooted on the old Sydney tram depot site (itself on the site of Bennelong’s camp), the city was fantastically corrupt. The cops ran Kings Cross, the gangs ran the unions which ran the wharves, the Liberal Party was raking in the cash from re-zonings, and on and on. The idea that the government was anything but a carve-up would have been greeted with derision.
But if you had said to anyone of the new Opera House — as its concrete sails were going up, and after initial resistance to it had crumbled — that one day it would serve as a giant billboard, they would have thought you were crazy. The profane game, the muck and violence, was everywhere. Why run it up the sides of this beautiful thing?
That is one shift between the spirit of that age and ours. Until the last 20 or so years ago, there was a sufficient separation between wider public life and the market, that ideas such as flogging a dodged-up race on the Opera House, or turning a Melbourne public square into a display case for a giant golden iPad, would not arise. But now the market is so co-extensive with everyday life that politicians, hacks and chancers — either naturally cynical, or sniffing the wind — feel they can get away with such.
With a section of the population, perhaps they can. In the new class split that governs our lives, things that were once seen as for “all the people” are now seen as markers of power and authority. As mass working and middle-class culture increasingly became commercial culture, the exuberant profaning of the artistic “sacred” became a sign of the democratic.
Artists themselves desacralised the Opera House by projecting their crappy designs on it. The whole point about the sacred is its austerity and inviolability. Once you put up some bad expressionist tie-in with a piece of German Shrieking from the Sydney Theatre Company, you’re half on the way to hanging Maccas on the sails.
But the degree of disdain for “their” culture has blindsided both Victorian and NSW state governments to the level of attachment that there is to such objects, among those who feel it to be theirs. They’ve also missed how many such people there now are, erroneously believing them to be a few “trendies” or “basket weavers”.
In NSW, this may be turn out to be a big miscalculation. Wentworth is exactly the sort of seat where the visceral anger at Opera House advertising would have a big impact. It’s full of people who understand in their bones what their premier and prime minister purport not to: that a secular “sacred” object, can’t be a little bit of a “billboard”, any more than the nave of a cathedral can be.
The feeling of nauseated dismay that people feel when something shared, free and in common, is co-opted, is now energising, because people feel that everything they care about is disappearing. The distinction between material and non-material issues is a nonsense; this is a material issue because it makes people feel totally crappy about their society: frustrated, angered, dismayed, bereft.
It is more than enough to take another slice off Dave Sharma, especially now that PM ScareCro — the cynical ex-tourism industry flak, with his creeping Jeebus ideas of the sacred — has come out in favour of it. Phelps should go in hard on it.
In the meanwhile, and in parallel, the advertising should be mass disrupted. Unions should green ban it in the first instance; Opera House staff should refuse to co-operate. Angry Sydneysiders are already planning a “light-based” protest on Tuesday. There must be multiple ways to screw this up. Wouldn’t it be great if they all happened? Now that would put that ridiculous steel prison toilet of a city on the map once more.
The gambling lobby, the poker machine industry and the hotels mob have both Liberals and Laborites alike in their pockets. Foley and Albo were out quicksmart doing the old “don’t be a wowser” routine and Morrison and Gladys were spouting the free market angle.
Shorten seems to have been smart enough to keep his gob shut….Morrison is incapable of doing likewise.
Those who thought Albo was the new messiah need to think again.
Albo the new messiah? The pr*ck cut his teeth dumping Labor’s anti-uranium stance in the ’80s and has continued as a cynic ever since. If not for his electorate and surname, he’d be as happy joining Hanson as Labor.
I think it is only right & fair that the Porn Industry be allowed to advertise their wares on the side of Churches.
“The feeling of nauseated dismay”
Beautifully put Guy.
The solution is blindingly obvious, project the advertising for racing and all forms of gambling on the war memorials dotted around the country. Two up and other forms of gambling were enjoyed by diggers around the globe so what would be more natural than touting for a bookie via a war memorial. Those who object to that obviously aren’t patriotic enough and should go study at the Ramsay Centre for a while.
Splendid notion Unimpressed. “Horatio” Nelson, custodian of the Canberra War Memorial would be all for it. He reckons it’s ok to have financial support from the armament industry for the memorial to our glorious dead; perfect symmetry.
A brilliant idea.
Two other venerable Oz ‘sports’ spring to mind ie: dwarf-throwing & wet t-shirt competitions. Using the Hillsong building as a billboard to promote these would be in keeping with Morrison’s marketing psyche.
I thought St Mary’s cathedral would also be a great billboard.
Hillsongs church
Where is the Opera House Trust in all of this? Why has it made no comment (or at least no widely reported one) ? Is its Chairman, Nicholas Moore, too preoccupied with other news – about German tax havens for instance? Also Chair of another important public arts organisation, Screen Australia, he should be seen/heard to defend the independence of a cultural institution such as the Opera House. Or does he see the role of chair more in the way that Justin Milne apparently saw his position at the helm of the ABC Board?