Friday 12 September, 6:00PM-8:00PM
Estuaries & EWF X
EWF X Textile Message: An Exhibition
Emotional textile objects, be they clothes or otherwise, are a vital part of everyday life.
Textile Message presents seven stories about favoured and not-so-favoured clothes and textile pieces, woven with memory and emotion. Textile Message is an artist’s enquiry into significant clothes and other textile objects. Presented as part of Pieced Work, an ongoing literature project.
Pay-What-You-Wish
No Vacancy
34-40 Jane Bell Lane (off Russell St)
Level 3, QV Building
Victoria 3000
Clare Carlin
Clare Carlin is a writer across forms. She runs Pieced Work, an ongoing literature project.
Trish Bolton
Trish Bolton’s debut novel, Whenever You’re Ready, was published by Allen & Unwin in 2024. Her writing has appeared in The Saturday Paper, The Age, Sunday Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Canberra Times, Overland, New Matilda, The Big Issue and Visible Ink. Trish has been the recipient of an Australian Society of Authors mentorship, […]
Anne M Carson
Anne M Carson is an Australian independent researcher, creative writing teacher, poet, and essayist living by the bay on unceded Bunurong Country. Her poetry has been published internationally, and widely in Australia over many years, receiving numerous awards including being shortlisted in the Women Authors New South Wales Poetry Prize (2024) and commended in the Ada Cambridge Poetry award (2024). Her latest book is The Detective’s Chair: prose poems about fictional detectives (Liquid Amber Press 2023). Her PhD (2023, RMIT) received an Outstanding Dissertation Prize (American Educational Research Association, Visual and Performing Arts SIG, 2024).
Shu-Ling Chua
Shu-Ling Chua is a Melbourne-based essayist, poet and zine-maker. Her essay collection, Echoes, jointly won the Small Press Network Book of the Year Award. Shu-Ling’s work has appeared in Peril Magazine, Meanjin, Rabbit, 4A Papers and elsewhere. She is interested in unexpected beauty, small joys and quiet epiphanies.
Emilie Collyer
Emilie Collyer lives on unceded Wurundjeri land where she writes across forms. Her poetry collection Do you have anything less domestic? (Vagabond Press 2022) won the Five Islands Poetry Prize and in 2024 she was runner-up in the Gwen Harwood Poetry Prize and shortlisted in the Newcastle Poetry Prize. Emilie is currently under commission with […]
Julia English
Julia English is a researcher and creative practitioner, whose work spans written, audio, digital, and textile media. She has a PhD in fashion and textiles from RMIT University, where her research explored how local actors collaborate to remake textile waste, sharing her interviews via her podcast Seam Change, and publishing her findings within her thesis […]
Leila Lois
Leila Lois is a dancer and writer of Kurdish/Celtic origin, raised in Aotearoa. She has poetry, short stories and essays published both in Australia and internationally. In her spare time, she loves to go vintage shopping and make costumes for dance.
Mira Robertson
Mira Robertson is a novelist, short story writer and screenwriter. She is the author of two novels: Grace & Marigold (Spinifex Press, 2024) and The Unexpected Education of Emily Dean (Black Inc, 2018). Her short stories have won prizes and been shortlisted for awards. She is published in various literary magazines including Meanjin, The Furphy […]
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Thursday 11 – Thursday 18 September
EWF X Veraison Magazine
Despite what most food media leads us to believe, food writing doesn’t have to be formulaic.
Wednesday 17 September, 6:30PM-7:30PM
Speculate Prize Anthology Launch
Celebrate the launch of the inaugural Speculate Prize Anthology; a vibrant, collection of bold, boundary-pushing new writing from emerging Australian voices.
Saturday 13 September, 2PM-3PM
From the Chrysalis
Surrounded by living symbols of metamorphosis, writers share from their own cocoons — tender, raw, and reverent.
Thursday 11th September, 6PM – 7PM
Opening Night: Finding Your Way
To mark the opening of EWF25, Guest Curator Coral Reeve will guide you along a contemporary Songline. Come witness an array of First Nations oral storytellers as they explore historical paths, right up into the present day.
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