Something Special, Something Rare (17 page)

WHITE SPIRIT

CATE KENNEDY

The woman artist, Mandy, tells me on the Tuesday they need another day to finish the clothing in the foreground of the mural. She's leaning against the table telling me this, rolling a cigarette. She's got a look I would call high-maintenance – hair with lots of startling colour, stiff with gel and arranged to slope here and there, multiple earrings up her ear, lace-up combat boots. It's a look designed to suggest she's impoverished yet bohemian and individualistic, and nobody round here wears anything like what she's got on. She and her boyfriend, the other artist, drive in each morning from another part of town, a suburb where you can get a double latte early in the morning sitting on an upturned milk-crate outside a café.

The residents of this estate took a few surreptitious looks at this pair when they first arrived, and have chosen to stay out of their way since. We'll have to invite some in specially, over the next couple of days, for the photo documentation we need. Some casual shots of the artists chatting and interacting with residents, facilitating important interchange. Community ownership. An appreciation of process. It's all there in the grant evaluation forms.

Mandy flips open some of the books she's brought and taps an illustration. It's of a couple of women in Turkey, standing at some festival in regional costumes, the embroidery on their blouses and hats and vests achingly bright.

‘That's what we're after,' she says, dragging on her rollie. ‘We're focusing on getting that design right. All the details and colours. See the women there?'

She gestures to the mural, where her partner's painting in the figures of three women. They're prominent, next to the four laughing Eritrean children, who are holding a basketball.

‘Should that be a soccer ball?' I say, half to myself.

‘Sorry?'

‘Should those kids be holding a soccer ball instead? They've actually formed a whole team; they play on the oval on a Sunday afternoon. I think soccer's more their thing.'

I might be wrong. That might be the Somalis. But a furrow of concern appears on her brow.

‘Do they? That wasn't in our brief. But we'll change it, don't worry. We'll just blank out the orange and make it black and white.'

‘I don't want to put you out, or start telling you how to do your job.'

‘Not at all,' she says, grinning. ‘That's what we're here for. Cultural appropriateness.' She exhales smoke and calls, ‘Jake! The African kids – it's soccer, not basketball.'

He stops painting, stands up and stretches, and frowns at the mural.

‘Do you reckon we'll have to change their singlets then?'

They both stand silently for a few moments, considering the image before them.

‘No,' she says finally. ‘Leave the singlets. Nobody'll notice that.'

*

They'd said in their interview, these two, that meeting the local community was their chief interest in applying for the job. They'd done similar things elsewhere – one at the Koori health centre, one at the credit co-operative, a portfolio of photos from a wall mural at a community market up in Queensland – and they said what kept them doing it was the rich sense of connection you achieved working alongside the very people you were depicting in your mural, and the growing sense of community ownership through collaboration. When they talked about the celebration of diversity, and how excited they were about all the different cultural groups represented on the estate, I'd felt the centre director, on the interview panel beside me, mentally checking boxes.

Now I look in, sometimes, on my way to teaching a class or driving the community bus somewhere and I don't want to hang around. They don't seem too excited now. There's nobody there but the two of them, with their big paint-splattered tarps and their ghetto blaster, music echoing round the empty basketball court as the mural gradually takes shape. Even the kids who usually come in here to shoot baskets after school are giving them a wide berth. It makes me uncomfortable, like I've let them down somehow, like it's our process here at the centre which hasn't worked. It's awkward, this silence; tainted with failure that nobody wants to claim. We skirt around it, the three of us.

‘You'll be finished by Thursday, won't you?' I say. ‘Because the opening's on Friday night and we can't change it, there's local councillors coming, and the minister.'

‘Yep. It'll be done. We're used to working through the night, aren't we Jake?'

He nods and grins back – easygoing, unthreatening, pleasant. And yet nobody's come in here and expressed an interest in picking up one of those brushes and helping. Nobody.

I'll have to round up some of the primary kids in my after-school club tomorrow and get them in here. Take the photos then. We can give out some brushes and they can do some background, or something. Grass. Sky. Paint in those skin tones, all those larger-than-lifesize arms draped around shoulders. They'll like that. At least, I hope they will. I hope they won't bounce off the walls with hyperactivity; throwing paint, scrawling their names, going crazy.

*

I unlock the office to get my bag out and scrabble in it for money to buy material for the women's fabric-painting class. I'm meant to use cash from the kitty but it's such a business, writing out a request form and waiting round for the admin officer to open the cashbox to sign it off. Easier to just pay myself for the plain cotton pillowcases and white T-shirts they like to paint. I park outside Spotlight and race in, arriving back at the car just in time to see a parking inspector writing me a ticket.

‘Oh, come on, it's only two minutes past.'

‘It's a clearway after 4 p.m., just like the sign says.'

‘Look, I'm buying stuff for a class. For a group of refugee women.' I hate trotting that out, and in any case technically it's a bit of a white lie now, but this is my money we're talking about, my free time, my goodwill.

He sighs and looks at me.

‘See?' I say, showing him the discount pillowslips, the tiny children's T-shirts. ‘Please.'

‘Get going then,' he says shortly, deleting something on his machine and walking off. Angry with himself for giving in to me. He'd be a boy off the estate, himself. I bet thirty years ago he came with his parents from Lebanon and grew up on those stairwells and in that glass-strewn park. I bet he could still tell me the number of his flat, if I asked him. The number, the smell, the noise outside, the silent resolution of his parents to get out.

‘Thanks!' I call out, but he's already at the next car up the road, already disappearing in a gritty shimmer of peak-hour monoxide.

*

‘What do you think of the mural?' I say to the women later as they bend over their paintings. ‘The big picture, in the gym?'

They smile shyly. ‘Good.'

‘Do you think you'd like to go in and help them, just do a little bit of painting in there?'

I catch their quick, hidden glances of consternation.

‘No, no.' They're all smiling hard. ‘Is very nice, but no.'

‘You don't want to paint, though?'

‘With the girl with the … um, this?' Nahir gestures fleetingly to her tongue, where Mandy has a stud, and all the women giggle uncomfortably.

I smile back, and shrug. I thought they'd like it, a mural that showed their community's diversity. We can all reel the figures off, the workers here, with a sort of proprietary pride: fourteen distinct cultural groups! Nine different languages! We shake our heads in bemusement at the multicultural, multilingual, multi-tasking jobs we've landed in, where every newsletter and flier has to be in five different translations, where if we're not running to put up the nets for Vietnamese boys' volleyball we're busy setting up the cooking class for the East Timorese mothers' group.

Maybe there wasn't enough consultation, after all. It's hard, finding something everyone's happy with. Or maybe the artists' hair and big boots, their thumping music, has scared them off.

‘You'll come on Friday, though? To the opening?' I cringe at the eager insistence in my voice. They smile, confer among themselves in low voices, and nod obligingly at me.

‘Yes. We all come.'

‘Because, you know, you can wear national costume, if you like. Your traditional dresses? That would be wonderful. The minister would love to see that.' Their faces grow wary and apologetic with unsayable things. The room is stiff with a charged awkwardness, with languages I can't speak.

‘No. But we come.' They go back to their painting, murmuring and sorting through the photocopied pages of designs. I should get a photo of this, I think absently; this pile of embroidery patterns they've all brought from Turkey, Afghanistan and Iraq, all shared around and used as stencils. If I mentioned it to the centre manager, he'd want a photo for our annual general report. Still, at least they're all coming along to the same class, and God knows that took me a while. Maybe one day I'll convince them to share tables.

Here in Australia, the women don't embroider the designs, though. They paint them straight onto fabric instead, finishing several pillowcases or table napkins in one afternoon. Out in the gym, the mural artists are carefully painting their figures in traditional embroidered dresses copied from a library book; in here, in the craft room, the real women are outfitted in pastel windcheaters, some of them decorated with flowery borders of quick-drying fabric paint. I heat up the iron and press their pillow-cases flat to make the dyes permanent and washable. Steam billows up in my face; the hot, comforting smell of clean, pressed cotton, the same the world over.

*

Wednesday afternoon, and Mandy and Jake are still not finished. There's a couple of faces still just sketched in at the front, likenesses they're working on from the health centre's photo album of snapshots from last year's barbecue. It's a rainbow of faces now, the mural, a melting pot. A few Anglo faces are placed judiciously next to Laotian and Eritrean, Vietnamese alongside El Salvadorian and Iraqi and Aboriginal, all standing ‘We Are the World' style with arms round each other, grinning as if the photographer's somehow cracked a joke they all find mutually hilarious, something that in real life would involve several simultaneous translators and a fair whack of fairy dust.

The centre director is thrilled, the minister's going to love it, the artists have a jaunty spring in their step because the mural itself, it must be said, is stunning. It's a multicultural vision to be proud of. Community workers from other centres and other estates are invited to the Friday opening to marvel and envy, and apply for their own grants.

‘You look a bit flat,' says Mandy, raising her eyes from the photo album to glance my way.

‘No, I'm great. It looks wonderful, it really does.'

‘We've left that bit there for the kids to work on this afternoon,' she says, pointing to a blank section of sky.

‘OK, good.' I'll have to choose five or six kids, I think, bribe them with chocolate not to wreck it, just paint the blue like they're told.

‘Someone here to see you in the office,' a workmate tells me, putting her head round the door. The music's off, briefly, and her voice echoes in the big, empty space.

It's a guy in a suit. He steps forward to shake my hand.

‘You phoned me,' he says, ‘about the anti-graffiti sealant? I'm here from Pro-Guard, just to inspect the wall surface to make sure you purchase the right product.'

‘Oh, yes. Well, we want to treat a mural to protect it against graffiti.'

He nods. ‘That's a real asset-management issue now. Our products give years of repeat protection, whether you choose the impregnation-style pore blocking penetrative sealer or something with a sacrificial surface …'

He keeps going like this until my head is swimming with compounds, polycarbons, two-packs and one-pot formulations. I keep nodding as he inspects the wall in the gym and talks about polysiloxane coatings versus silicone rubber, and finally I say, ‘Look, I need something we can apply ourselves which is quick-drying. And if someone graffitis it, I want to be able to clean it off without too much fuss.'

‘They won't graffiti it,' interjects Mandy, who's listening. She's walking along past each big smiling face, painstakingly adding a dot of white in each eye, so that they jump to life with a realistic twinkle. ‘Nobody will graffiti anything they feel a sense of owner-ship and inclusion about.'

‘Right,' says the sealant salesman, eyeing her briefly before turning back to me. ‘Like I said, we're in the business of helping you maintain the value of your asset and protecting it from senseless defacing. So for your requirements, I'd recommend Armour-All.'

‘Great!' I respond with a smile. I'm tired now.

‘It's a urethane product. You mix in the solvent and apply two coats twelve hours apart; using masks and gloves and adequate ventilation there's no reason why you can't apply it yourself. And it has terrific anti-stick. You can just remove any graffiti with white spirit.'

‘Wonderful. We'll take it.'

He says he can deliver it that afternoon and names a figure. I nod, toting up the remainder of the grant money in the account. Just enough left over for snacks at the opening, catered for by the Vietnamese social group. Everyone likes spring rolls, as long as we don't make them with pork. We're having bread and dips too, so the Turkish cooking-class members don't get their noses out of joint. And maybe I should get the East Timorese to sing something …

‘I'll go and get the after-school club kids,' I tell the artists. ‘We've got to get this done by tonight so we can make sure the sealant's dry by Friday afternoon. The Armour-All.'

Jake and Mandy say they'll help me apply it. They're nice people, really. I don't understand why this whole process hasn't worked out like I thought, like I said it would on my grant project description.

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