Strange Cities (2008)... is an evolving research space [experimental blog] extending BLACK BOX http://www.strangecities.net created as part of my doctor of creative arts @ University of Technology, Sydney. (2006). This blog charts my research into Old Shanghai and SHANGHAI JAZZ! Tatiana Pentes
"My shoes are Japanese
My trousers are English
My hat is Russian
But my heart is Hindustani"
film lyric by Shailendra in POPULAR MUSIC: South Asia & the West, Vol. 7 No. 2, May 1988.
Tatiana's recent work BLACKBOX http://www.strangecities.net has been exhibited internationally at conferences and film and media festivals in countries including the US, France, Italy, Greece, Australia, Thailand and Japan. Her creative research explores the intersection of digital film, interactive multimedia, digital sound and new forms of story-telling, and she has taught across a range of disciplines at various institutions. Tatiana's recent research has been published in New Talents: Backburning: Journal of Australian Studies and a collaboration with radio producer Eurydice Aroney "A Heart Ripped Open" was commissioned by Radio Eye & represented the ABC in the Prix Italia 2004. She produced the multimedia design for Menorah of Fang Bang Lu:: an online documentary project on Shanghai with Professor Andrew Jakubowicz. She collaborated with filmmaker Geoffrey Weary on Scenes From A Shanghai Hotel (2007) and Strange Cities (2000) which was produced in association with the Australian Film Commission and for which she was the recipient of an AIMIA and ATOM Award.
My grandmother Xenia Vladimirovna was born in Russia 1908. Her father was in the Tsarist Russian navy. After the Bolshevik revolution 1917 he did not return from sea. After a brief marriage to a widowed vet surgeon with five sons, Xenia told me, her mother Eugenia and three sisters Helena, Galya, and Marya made the journey by Trans-Siberian railway to Harbin, Manchuria in 1923 to find husbands in China. As a singer and dancer at the Modern Hotel, Harbin across the ballroom she met my grandfather Serge Ermolaeff (Serge Ermoll & His Music Masters). "I didn't think Serge would notice but he did, we Russian girls wore beautiful gowns because at least we got paid, not like my Chinese friend Rose, who had to make money in other ways...." she told me half her life lease later in Sydney. Later in Shanghai she married Serge 1933 where they re-met at the majestic Hotel. My father Serge Jr was born 1943 in Shanghai during the Japanese occupation in China. After a successful career as a jazz orchestra leader in the big clubs & hotels of Shanghai: Paramount, Cathay Hotel, Ladlow's Cassinova, the French Club, Wagon Lits my grandfather Sergei accepted passage on the Chan Cha ship to Hong Kong and then Sydney Australia 1951. Decadent jazz music became unfashionable with the Chinese Communist revolution, but he managed to continue working at the Russian Club, in Pitt Street Sydney. He brought with him my father Serge, his wife Xenia, his musical scores, and one Trumpet. The Australian government gave them a peppercorn lease on a Deco house on Monterey Street in Sans Souci. My grandmother always told my father a young jazz pianist also......"don't dream about Melbourne "its such an old fashioned town!"...her sister Galya married a British businessman from the Shanghai Texaco Company and relocated there....Xenia & Sergei made the train trip on the Sydney-Melbourne over night express many times. It is strange - my sister Alexandra lives in Melbourne now & has just married a Serbian man and given birth to her first son.