Acclaimed guitarists Slava and Leonard Grigoryan perform a suite of evocative music inspired by objects personally selected from the National Museum of Australia's vast collection tracing Australia's diverse and complex history.
Each of the 18 compositions corresponds to a specific object, with 3D video projections enhancing the performance. Incorporating all their influences from classical to jazz and contemporary music, performed on a variety of guitars (electric, 8 string tenor ukulele, 12 string and classical), audiences will see and hear the Grigoryan Brothers like never before.
This Is Us was composed during lockdown with Slava and Leonard living in different states. A new direction for them, this is the first time they will be performing an entire program of original works.
“We chose objects that try to represent some of our First Nations’ history as well as colonisation, migration, innovation and stories of love and loss. We were deeply moved by all of them.” - Slava & Leonard Grigoryan
The objects and music take us from the deep past of early Indigenous Australians to the making of contemporary Australian society.
Eighteen individual musical compositions relate the brothers’ response to, and feeling for, their personal selection of objects from the 250,000 in the Museum’s collection.
Each composition focuses on a particular object, among them: a 65,000 year old ochre of the Madjebebe rock shelter, a convict love token relating the experience of transportation, the stream anchor from Matthew Flinders’ HMS Investigator, a preserved wet specimen of a whole skinned thylacine, the Kimberley spear point fashioned by Aboriginal people from glass, a cricket bat of the famed Sir Donald Bradman, the prototype Holden motorcar that began the car manufacturing industry in Australia.
Presented by: Frankston Arts Centre and the Grigoryan Brothers as part of Season 2025
Thanks to our 2025 Season Partners