![]() No one else in the building was wearing a mask. It is for $10/hr +tips which is not a guarantee of $15/hr or even $13/hr that they lowered their most recent listing to. This job DOES NOT pay what the listing says. Put stuff in proper location that customer wants and head home Stack and organize the truck and take it to the new property and unload. Drive to location of move and neatly wrap all furniture and box up all stuff that can be. Show up in the morning, load up your truck with all equipment that will be beneficial for your move. What is a typical day like for you at the company? Wonderful environment and even greater people The hold barbecues and parties alot of the guys disc golf so we like to do that on off days or after work. What is the work environment and culture like at the company?Īs I stated before this company is a family and when you work here you understand that and feel very much included in everything that goes on. Just body pain from the job but that's obvious it's a moving company and a physical job. What is the most stressful part about working at the company? ![]() Management is awesome and I have alot of respect for them. A bunch of great guys and would definitely recommend this company to anyone looking for work. This company is a family and treats everyone with respect. There is something completely riveting about these scenes and the sound environment that the artists have created around them.What is the best part of working at the company?Īwesome company to work for. 'The other stand-out work in Spaced is a video installation by Melbourne artists Sonia Leber and David Chesworth, of cows and sheep being herded through the country by dogs and men. Sarah Miller, RealTime No.108 April-May 2012 Moments of intensity, changing rhythms and gaits, are interspersed with personal, almost transcendent moments of interspecies connection.' Jared Davis, 'Circle Work' in Spaced: Art Out of Place exhibition catalogue, IASKA, 2012 ![]() In the absence of fencing and human physical constructs we are drawn to the pattern, logic and language of crowd behaviour.' We are witnessing the actions not through a human lens, but a constructed, synthesised viewpoint. 'Leber and Chesworth created the work through a series of removals, honing and refinement.The sound design in particular creates a composed environment, with human calls largely removed. Dan Rule, The Age, Melbourne, March 7, 2012 Via a montage of intermittent long shots and close-ups and atmospheric and proximate - or as Chesworth puts it, "psychological" - sound, The Way You Move Me counterpoints the distant thundering of hooves and the amorphous throng of animals with sound and vision from deep within the herd, individual protagonists, mothers and calves pulling, shunting and shaping the composition of the herd as they bustle by.' It's a sensation the video work explores to visceral effect. ![]() 'The installation.offers a macro depiction and micro deconstruction of the energies, flows and forces at play in and around the herd or flock. 'Commissioned as part of an IASKA residency program pairing artists with remote Western Australian communities, Leber and Chesworth's latest work, The Way You Move Me, traces the subtleties, complexities and rhythms implicit in the mass-movement of cattle and sheep across the vast farming properties. ![]() The artists gratefully acknowledge the support of IASKA, Pennie Aitken, Moora Fine Arts Society and the participants from Moora, Western Australia. Art Gallery of Western Australia collection. At this juncture of chaos and order is an examination of the forces and connections that exist between humans and animals.Īnimal Ark, Art Gallery of Western Australia (2014) Fehily Contemporary, Melbourne (2012) Spaced: Art Out of Place, Fremantle Arts Centre (2012) Animal/Human, UQ Art Museum, Brisbane (2012) and The Social Life of Things, Faculty Gallery, Monash University, Melbourne (2012). These shifting lines and shapes are accompanied by a wordless soundscape that both mimics and enhances this sense of motion. It follows the movements of sheep and cattle across the Western Australian wheatbelt, capturing the internal dynamics and rhythmic ebbs and flows of herds. The Way You Move Me is a two-channel video installation created by Leber and Chesworth during an IASKA/Spaced residency. The mass movement of sheep, cattle and horses can be at times highly unpredictable and chaotic, or surprisingly ordered, with periods of intensification and periods of slowness. 2-channel HD video, 5.1 channel audio, 10.5 minutes, 2011 ![]()
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