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Creative Flourishing

Creative Flourishing

Von: Research Centre in Creative Arts and Human Flourishing
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Welcome to Creative Flourishing, a podcast that dives into the latest creative arts research and practice and asks how engaging with this might aid in human flourishing and have a positive impact upon our wellbeing. Each episode profiles a different form of creative practice, journeying from curating exhibitions at the Venice Biennale through to creative writing responses to apocalyptic futures and everything in between.

Creative Flourishing is produced through the Research Centre in Creative Arts and Human Flourishing at the University of Queensland, with funding support from the Faculty of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences.

Copyright 2025 All rights reserved.
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  • Museums and Inclusivity
    Feb 5 2026

    Museums are archives which preserve objects that define historical and cultural events. We visit museum exhibitions to learn about the world's present and past and to come face-to-face with artefacts that played a role in history. But what happens when these artefacts only tell part of a story, or give one demographic's perspective? How do we fill these gaps in the archive, to make museums inclusive spaces where all demographics can see themselves reflected?

    This episode dives into a reverse collecting project which originated from a gap in Queensland Museum's collection relating to maternity and motherhood. Join Queensland Museum Senior Curator Liz Bissell, UQ's Director of Museum Studies Caroline Wilson-Barnao, and expert on museum experiences outside of traditional museum environments Lisa Enright to learn more about how they are changing this narrative by sourcing more representative objects and stories. We also hear from Margaret Henderson, an expert on women's and feminist writing, who talks about her efforts to bring together a collection of second-wave feminist objects for the National Museum.

    This episode is hosted by Emma Cole, and edited and mastered by Anthony Frangi. Matt Bapty is the Creative Flourishing research assistant.

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    35 Min.
  • Medea in Exile
    Jan 12 2026

    During the first two decades of the twenty-first century, Australian audiences encountered Greek tragedy in mainstage theatres in domesticated adaptations more than in any other format. Medea was a popular source text, whether in Wesley Enoch's adaptation, which collides Euripides' and Seneca's material with a narrative about intergenerational cycles of violence in Indigenous Australian communities, or Kate Mulvany and Anne-Louise Sarks' pressure cooker of a play, where audiences watch the last hour of Medea's children's lives play out in real time. This episode explores a new Australian adaptation of Medea which explodes the myth out in the opposite direction, towards the epic rather than the domestic. Co-created by Australian playwright Tom Holloway and classicist Emma Cole, Medea in Exile is a trilogy of plays about Medea, built from lost and forgotten narratives from antiquity preserved in tragic fragments, quotations from ancient mythographers, and material evidence. Join us as we journey through the history of Australian adaptations of Greek tragedy in the twenty-first century, where we touch upon Tom's prior works Don't Say The Words (from Aeschylus' Agamemnon) and Love Me Tender (from Euripides' Iphigenia at Aulis), and consider the enduring appeal of using theatre to explore grief and to purge or cleanse us of our emotions.

    This episode is produced in partnership with the Assemblage Centre for Creative Practice Research at Flinders University and is guest hosted by Professor Chris Hay, Director of Assemblage.

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    59 Min.
  • Sounding Symmetries
    Dec 11 2025

    Symmetry is all around us. Since the time of the ancient Greeks, from the legend of Pythagoras through to Galileo and Descartes, it has been theorised through science and embodied through music. But how are the creative arts responding to symmetry today? Can the concept help communities to flourish, enriching them through the arts whilst educating them about maths?

    In this episode mathematician Artem Pulemotov and musicologist Denis Collins join host Emma Cole to discuss how the concept of symmetry can bridge the divide between arts and science. We explore Artem and Denis' unique partnership and how it has led to the commission of two new compositions, by Nicole Murphy and Robert Davidson, which seek to render the transformations behind multidimensional symmetry systems sonically. Join us to hear excerpts from both compositions, performed by acclaimed ensemble Topology, and to consider the public engagement benefits behind rendering mathematics through music.

    This episode features performances from Christa Powell (violin), John Babbage (soprano saxophone), Robert Davidson (bass guitar), and Therese Milanovic (piano). Geoff McGahan is the recording engineer for the musical excerpts from Typology, and Anthony Frangi edited and mastered the overall episode. Matt Bapty is the Creative Flourishing research assistant.

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