Hosier Lane, Melbourne
Hosier Lane is a bluestone cobbled vehicular and pedestrian laneway on the southern edge of the central city grid. Hosier lane is a much celebrated landmark mainly due to its sophisticated Urban art.[1]
History
Hosier Lane opened as a Street Art Gallery in 1998 by the City Lights Initiative.[2] The lane is located opposite the entrance to the Atrium at Federation Square on Flinders St, placing the lane prominent position in the city. The lane has been noted for the quality and the often political nature of its art.[3] It features in the state-sponsored book The Melbourne Design Guide and in Tourism Victoria's Lose Yourself in Melbourne advertising campaign, leading to questions about the dichotomy of Victoria's approach to graffiti.[4] The graffiti-covered walls and art-installations have become a popular backdrop for fashion and wedding photography. In 2013 street artist Adrian Doyle painted the entirety of the adjacent Rutledge Lane one color with the consent of the Melbourne city council to create a work he called "Empty Nursery Blue".[5]
In November 2013, Melbourne's largest urban art paint-up was undertaken in the form of All Your Walls, organised by Invurt, Land of Sunshine and Just Another and held in conjunction with the National Gallery of Victorias MelbourneNow event. Involving some of the cities finest graffiti crews/collectives and street artists, a major makeover of Hosier and Rutledge Lanes was performed, in order to celebrate the significant role street art and graffiti continues to play in the cultural life of this city. Over a period of two massive painting sessions during November 2013, both Hosier and Rutledge Lanes were first entirely buffed black and then completely transformed, top to bottom, by over 100 local graffiti and street artists – all of which culminated in an event with live graffiti projections in Hosier Lane in homage to Melbourne graffiti and street art.[6]
Other Features
Hosier Lane is also known for its upmarket cocktail lounges including the popular Misty and MoVida. An open air cooking session with MoVida's chef Frank Camorra on Masterchef Australia season 2 showcased the lane as a major Melbourne attraction.[7]
Controversy
In Early 2020 six masked people 'Colour Bombed' the lane. This was treated as an act of vandalism by the Melbourne Lord Mayor and was investigated by police for vandalism, while many street artists believed that they did nothing wrong and were just adding to the 'free for all nature' of the site. [8]
References
- Coslovich, Gabriella. "Our colourful underbelly", The Age (Australia), 4 December 2005.
- https://tomelbourne.com.au/hosier-lane/
- Johnston, Chris. "Look around you, it's just street art", The Age (Australia), 16 May 2007.
- Freeman-Greene, Suzy. "Urban Scrawl: Shades of Grey", The Age (Australia), 12 January 2008.
- Cuthbertson, Deborah Gough and Debbie (2013-08-26). "Artist Adrian Doyle paints Rutledge Lane blue". The Age. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
- https://artsandculture.google.com/exhibit/%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-all-your-walls-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-%C2%A0-hosier-lane-invurt/wQ1MLxR1?hl=en
- Kalina, Paul. Secrets and fries The Sydney Morning Herald 20 May 2010
- https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-10/hosier-lane-street-art-destroyed-by-spray-paint-vandals/11948762