Sofya Gollan, Author at Sofya Gollan https://sofyagollan.com.au/author/sofyag/ Writer, Director & Access Coordinator Mon, 26 Feb 2024 03:13:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://sofyagollan.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/cropped-Favicon-32x32.png Sofya Gollan, Author at Sofya Gollan https://sofyagollan.com.au/author/sofyag/ 32 32 Hear Me Out https://sofyagollan.com.au/accessible-arts-artscreen-profiling-2023-artists-guy-morgan-and-sofya-gollan-2/ Mon, 26 Feb 2024 02:55:40 +0000 https://creativeb9.sg-host.com/?p=5769 Sofya Gollan is a Deaf actor, screenwriter and director and Play School presenter.
Words by Mia Timpano

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Sofya Gollan is a Deaf actor, screenwriter and director and Play School presenter.

Words by Mia Timpano

Frankie Magazine Issue 84 2018

Change is inevitable – it might just happen in the most improbable place. Like on a TV kid’s show, for example. In 1991 Play School became the first Australian television program to present a Deaf person in a positive light. That person was Sofya Gollan, born deaf as a result of the rubella epidemic of the early 70’s – a common cause of deafness of her generation. “Up until then, it was very… ‘Look at those poor Deaf people’, whereas on Play School it was just presented as, ‘This is a Deaf person doing stuff like other presenters,” Sofya recalls. “It would have been the first time many deaf kids had seen a person using sign language on national TV. “And that’s so important,” she says, “because you start feeling included in the greater society.”

 

Although very proud to have been part of the ground-breaking show (and the recipient of many “cute” fan letters and drawings), Sofya wasn’t always proud to be Deaf. “I had a much more complicated relationship with it,” she says laughing. “With disability it’s hard to not be affected by how people view you, no matter how strong you might be inside. When you’re surrounded by people going “you can’t do that”, or “Oh my god, you can acheive the most basic, simple thing,’ your identity gets coloured by low expectations” So what do you do? “You learn to be bulletproof”, Sofya says.

 

And in a way, she literally has been. She left school at 17 to work full time as an actor at the Australian Theatre of the Deaf, where she first immersed herself in learning Auslan (“My family was hearing so they never saw the need to pick it up” she explains) Sofya moved to the States, she had a gun pulled on her; she saw drug deals on the streets of Atlanta – all while touring with America’s Deaf theatre (National Theatre of the Deaf). “We were shadowed by voice actors, so audiences could understand what we were signing on stage,” Sofya recalls. Using sign gave all kinds of opportunities for visual puns. “And people got it, even if they didn’t know sign language – you can push it to mime, where you’re talking about love, for example, you might draw a heart in the air, and you might show your heart is thumping, fast or slow. Or you might show an arrow going through it, it’s quite pictorial.”

 

Sofya continued to forge a successful career in acting back home in Sydney, but it wasn’t quite the career she had hoped for. “I was reading roles of the poor deaf victim: the person who has to overcome many obstacles to just get a cup of tea,” she says. “I’m over-simplifying it, but I wasn’t seeing roles for Deaf people… doing stuff and having the same aspirations as anyone else: to get married, to fall in love, to be a firefighter, whatever…”

 

Sick of the victim stance that writers were perpetuating, Sofya set about creating some new on-screen roles for Deaf people. First step; get a degree at AFTRS – The Australian, Film, Television and Radio School. Check. Next step; get hired as a director. Not so simple. “I was launched into an industry at a time when ‘disability’ was a dirty word, she says. “There was no such thing as ‘inclusive’. So, if I was working, it was because I was generating my own projects, and that takes time and resources. After a while I found it exhausting.” Meanwhile Sofya watched her able-bodied contemporaries – i.e. people who didn’t need interpreters landing gig after gig. It was challenging seeing my peers shoot ahead and earn a living in the industry while I was shut out,” she admits.

The industry is changing, however – and in a major way. Today, Sofya works at Create NSW in the investment team assessing which projects will receive support. “It came about because of Courtney Gibson, who was then CEO of Screen NSW,” Sofya explains, “she took a look around her office and realised she had no diversity on the floor. She headhunted me and said, “You’ve got film experience, apply for a part-time job here?” Since then, Sofya has become a full time senior-level executive managing Screenability – a program creating opportunities for Disabled folk in industry, alongside a curated program for Sydney Film Festival, along with her general slate of projects. “It’s great because it means producers have to deal with me the same way they have to deal with anybody in the agency, it opens their perception to people with disability in decision-making roles and normalises it in a way that really needs to happen.”

 

Over time, Sofya has changed perceptions around sign language, making it more accessible through her work on Play School (she still does the occasional show) and SignBaby, her Auslan DVD for parents of Deaf bubs. Chuck it on, settle on the couch, and Sofya will teach you over 200 signs, plus a few nursery rhymes.

 

Funnily enough Sofya doesn’t sign much at home. She received a cochlear implant 12 years ago which allows her to recognise speech, so her two sons have been slow to learn sign. “I’ve tried to teach them,” she says, “and I’m still trying”. It’s common for children of Deaf adults – or Coda’s as they’re known in the community – to not learn sign language if their parent is able to speak. It becomes extra hard to convince them to learn if their other parent doesn’t pick it up.

 

A full work life means there hasn’t been a lot of time for Sofya to take on personal creative projects in recent years – although there have been a few, including Gimpsey, a crowd-funded short film about a teenage girl struggling with personal insecurity and a toxic best friend. The role is played by Bridie McKim, an actress with mild cerebral palsy. “I wanted to present a character who was beautiful and desirable despite of or because of her disability, and could be just as duplicitous as anybody,” she says. “It’s my view that artists with disability offer a unique perspective on the world. And when they’re in charge of the narrative, they present a viewpoint that’s different to the ableist one most people have. So, rather than coming from the position of “I have disability; I need to be included; please let me in,” I come from the position; ‘I have a disability; this is what I’ve experienced; and this is the world as I see it. Isn’t it different? Isn’t it great?”.

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Accessible Arts: ArtScreen – Profiling 2023 Artists Guy Morgan And Sofya Gollan https://sofyagollan.com.au/accessible-arts-artscreen-profiling-2023-artists-guy-morgan-and-sofya-gollan/ Tue, 19 Dec 2023 22:00:04 +0000 https://boldlab.qodeinteractive.com/elementor/?p=438 ArtScreen is a programme supporting video artists to develop artworks to be screened at the Museum Of Contemporary Art (MCA) (Sydney), in celebration of International Day Of People With Disability. The 2023 event follows three successful years empowering artists.

In 2023, artists Guy Morgan and Sofya Gollan have been selected to create new works, exploring themes of identity, access, and social connectedness.

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New South Wales arts and disability organisation Accessible Arts presents opportunities for people with disability or who are d/Deaf to develop professional careers in the arts.

ArtScreen is a programme supporting video artists to develop artworks to be screened at the Museum Of Contemporary Art (MCA) (Sydney), in celebration of International Day Of People With Disability. The 2023 event follows three successful years empowering artists.

In 2023, artists Guy Morgan and Sofya Gollan have been selected to create new works, exploring themes of identity, access, and social connectedness.

Guy Morgan’s art practice is eclectic, but he’s best known for his portraiture work. He’s been a finalist for the Archibald Prize twice, and he currently teaches painting as part of the Pine Street Creative Tutor Panel for City of Sydney.

Sofya Gollan is a writer, director, and award-winning filmmaker, best known for being on ‘Play School’ and normalising disability on screen well before it was recognised as essential representation. Her work is informed by the experience of the outsider.

We sat down with the artists to learn more about what they’ll be presenting as part of ArtScreen in 2023.

SOFYA GOLLAN

Tell us a bit about what your work will present to audiences.
This will be an exploration of the senses that affect my life most – hearing and sight. I want to simulate a threshold crossing of the sensation of hearing to no hearing at all, and how sight overrides both. Wearing a cochlear implant means I am both profoundly Deaf and hearing to a great degree at the same time. It’s a duality I switch between on a daily basis. I also wanted to move away from the language-centred discourse of being Deaf, how language deprivation presents lingering barriers for most if not all Deaf people. I want this to be an exploration of how silence is embodied, and how the cochlear enlarges experience with sound free of cultural positive negative biases.

What has inspired you to go in this direction with the video artwork?
Working with collaborators Fausto Brusalimo, James P Brown, Cordeilia Beresford and Geordie Anderson was one of the driving forces of pulling together this project – I have worked with all of them previously and knew they would each bring their own experience and passions to the concept. When I saw what Fausto was doing with infrared motion capture and his coding, I was fascinated how Auslan could still be legible in that format even though detail and colour has been stripped away. It gave rise to more ideas around embodiment and how I could show a different state of being visually. And it also looks super cool!

What does it mean to have been chosen as part of this year’s ArtScreen?
I’m really thrilled to be part of Accessible Arts and MCA’s yearly tradition of screening commissioned films, and the opportunity to say I have had my films screened at the MCA is amazing. It’s a really amazing opportunity to present an experimental idea around my daily lived experience and elevate it into an art experience.

How did you get involved?
I’ve been to all of the previous ArtScreen events and loved the work that has been commissioned to date. So seeing the callout for applications I knew I had to give it a go.

What’s next for you?
After this film I want to develop a bigger scale work that involves both Hearing and Deaf attention and embodiment. I have a few ideas around this feeling of being Deaf and hearing that could be expanded. I am working on narrative works for TV and film as well, drawing on previous experiences to tell Deaf stories as I believe that we should be the architect of Deaf stories and experiences, not consultant bystanders. There are so many stories in the community that are by turns beautiful and horrifying, that illustrate the humanity of a little understood sensory disability and culture.

GUY MORGAN

What did you set out to achieve with your work?
To expand my practice into filmmaking. I wanted to work with and provide a platform for at least 10 artists living with disability to contribute and have their thoughts recorded as short responses to pointed questions in an unusual, interesting way. I wanted the video to promote both disability arts in general and individual members of the community using their own words.

What sorts of themes does your ArtScreen submission entail?
I see the video’s content to be powerful, informative and genuine. My intention is to make the aesthetics original and engaging with the video’s messaging to become part of a wider programme promoting inclusion and greater accessibility to the arts for those living with a disability (both artists and audiences).

How did you get involved with ArtScreen?
I subscribe to Accessible Arts’ e- newsletter, and the first item was a callout for ArtScreen 2023. My submission was titled ‘Written with a finger on a steamed-up window’.

What do you love most about creating work such as this?
1. Collaborating with generous, creative and enthusiastic people
2. Being totally focused on producing the best possible outcome
3. Using every creative ‘bone in my body’
4. Widening my knowledge and being busy
5. Having fun

What advice would you have for aspiring artists who are looking to make a career out of their passion?
Follow your passion, don’t take ‘no’ for an answer. If you make it happen, you’ll never ‘work’ a day in your life.

What’s next for you?
I have a solo show at M16 Gallery in Canberra in March-April next year, where I’ll be showing works from my ‘Evaporation series’ including paintings and video works that take inspiration from the ephemeral nature of the creative process, from initial ideas and messaging to actualisation, then to audience consumption. Like street art, stuff appears, then disappears. . . Was the message worth remembering?

ArtScreen is on at Museum Of Contemporary Art (Sydney) 1-3 December.

 

Article reproduced with permission from scenestr.

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