The Ball, 2023
single-channel film, two-channel sound, event, performance, community ritual, 16:00 mins.
Lead Artist, Director, Curator: Tina Stefanou
Cinematography and Edit: Wil Normyle
Field Recording: Eduardo Cossio
Sound design: Joseph Franklin
Colour grade: Tim Wreyford
Set dressing: Wren Richards and Christopher Williams from DADAA
Co-producers: The North Midlands Project, Andrew Bowman, David Bowman-Bright, Siobhan Berry and Richelle Essers
Support from: Creative Australia, DADAA, West Australian Opera, and Morawa District High School
Featured performers: Jenny Hickinbotham, Pia Harris, Jun Zhang, Joshua Harris from West Australian Opera, Morawa District High Brass Band, Choir, and DHS Rock Band, Don Blue, Lyndon Blue, Scribes of North Midlands, Carnamah-Perenjori Football Club, and local open mic performances from Sebastian Essers and Shire Boys
Filmed the day before the national referendum for an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, The Ball reanimates a dusty town hall through song, dance, and poetry.
The event features working-class poems and regional stories, alongside guest opera singers from the West Australian Opera. A procession moves down the main street, led by a primary school choir from Morawa District High singing in both Widi Widi language and English—escorted by Jaxon the horse and his rider, Jess Parker.
The Ball unsettles easy assumptions about voting positions, exposes the failures of the political class, and critiques representational policymaking. It draws attention to the divide between wealth centres and the textured realities of rural agricultural life—its settler paradoxes, and the slow, uneven road to post-national and decolonial rituals.
The event is the film. Drawing from The Firemen’s Ball and early Czechoslovakian cinema, The Ball reimagines civic gatherings as sites of both satire and sincerity.