
Image Five: Hiromi Tango, Hiromi Hotel INHABITANT, 2022. Archives of Feeling, 2022, RMIT Design Hub Gallery.

Image Three: Thembi Soddell, Who is Doing What to Whom (Object Impermanence), 2022. Image Two: Edge of the Present Warburton, photograph by Jessica Maurer. Image One: Uti Kulintjaku Collective, Atatjura Kulinma - Think Mindfully, 2022. The Big Anxiety Naarm is produced by RMIT Culture, in collaboration with UNSW, RMIT's Social and Global Studies Centre and CAST.

The trauma to her body was so extensive, the doctors treating her were forced to prioritise the life-threatening injuries, leaving her. The festival runs from today through 15 October. Kathryn Littlewood My body was ruined, but I was alive. Highlights include a two-day experiential forum at Storey Hall, the festival’s Awkward Conversations program – one-to-one conversations designed to break down the barriers to talking about mental health and the exciting Speaker Series hosted at The Capitol and The Wheeler Centre featuring expert creative thinkers and international guests exploring the major anxieties of our time.

Beginning today, The Big Anxiety Naarm (Melbourne) will bring together creative thinkers – including artists, researchers, scientists, health and community workers, and people with a wide range of lived experiences - to re-imagine mental health care for the 21st century.
