9 thoughts on “March 19: Stance

  1. Great story, thanks James, I knew nothing about Viva Gibb whatsoever, despite spending considerable time in West/North Melbourne and frequenting some of the places she documented.

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  2. Hi James

    I remember seeing this silkscreen pasted in Lygon Street on the wall in Timani’s as it used to be called back in the 1970s. Thanks again for a wonderful article. (I said hello in the outside area in Lazy Bones the other day.)

    Cheers, Bronwyn

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    1. Ah yes, Tiamo’s! Thank you for reading and remembering, Bronwyn. So many posters in multiple layers…it should have been preserved as a gallery, and what fond memories of one’s first taste of Chinotto, really decent coffees that fended off sleep in philosophy tutorials, and pasta…meals second only to Shakahari! At least we have Origini in Castlemaine. Viva Gibb is a real discovery and I hope her true worth is recognised.

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      1. Hi Bronwyn, and thank you…you’re right, it didn’t become Tiamo until after 1977 and at https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=4155044714749062&set=gm.2801931353471317&idorvanity=2199525433711915 there’s a colour transparency of the restaurant and it’s street-sign, labelled as from National Archives (can’t find the original at NAA) and there are the ‘rustic’ brown-stained boards on the front that were still there last time I visited.

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  3. Hi James,

    Viva’s daughter Sybil here. So great to read your beautiful piece on Viva. She was a force of nature indeed. A true artist, always creating, driven and never for financial gain. Her insight and empathy and creative force live on.

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    1. Hi Sibyl, I’m honoured to have your comments, but most of all I thank you for your generosity; anyone can now see the huge scope of Viva’s artistic output in the several collections to which you have provided her images. If only those organisations had been perceptive and farsighted enough to have made more purchases in her lifetime! There is so much more to Viva Gibb than I could ever fit into a blog post. She was a formidable force for good, a national treasure.

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