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Woomelang, VIC

Tiny town noted for its unique Mini Silo Art field bins

Today Woomelang, a small wheatlands settlement in the heart of the Wimmera, is a township which has, as its major attraction, an impressive collection of mini silo art depicting local endangered species. The Silo Art Trail, of which is it part, is one of those inspired ideas which started as a one-off project and has grown into a number of impressive and huge works of public art on a series of disused grain silos. The variation offered by Woomelang is that eight small field bins offer an interesting alternative to the huge wheat silos.

Location

Woomelang is located 361 km north-west of Melbourne via Bendigo and Birchip on the Sunraysia Highway.

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Origin of Name

Woomelang was originally known as “Cronomby Tanks” after the natural waterholes that first attracted the early settlers to this area. Local folklore claims that the name was changed in 1897 when a traveller riding a horse named, Melang said “Whoa Melang” and so the township became known as Woomelang. There is no evidence that this is true.

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Things to See and Do

Field Bin Silo Art
Located at 67 Brook Street, the field bin silo art (or mini silo art) comprises eight mini silos (known to the local farmers as field bins) with murals depicting the endangered species of the region.
These art works include:
* a pygmy possum painted by Bryan Itch
* a heath monitor painted by Andrew J Bourke
* a Mallee Emu-Wren painted by Jimmy Dvate 
* a spotted tailed quoll painted by Kaff-eine

Woomelang Shearing Shed
Located on Cronomby Tanks Road (off the Sunraysia Highway on the southern side of the town) is the Woomelang Shearing Shed which was built during World War II. The shed was lined with pressed egg tins due to a metal shortage because of the war. It has been gifted to the community because of its historic importance.

Cronomby Tanks
Located to the south of the town on Cronomby Tanks Road, the Cronomby Tanks are an attractive water reserve which comprises a series of earthen dams which were originally built by the government to hold water for trains.  The area has free camping and toilet facilities. It is also possible to go fishing. There are pleasant walking tracks and an interesting iron artwork display. 

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Other Attractions in the Area

Silo Art Trail
The Silo Art Trail is a journey of over 200 km from Rupanyup in the south (it is a small town which lies to the east of Horsham) through Sheep Hills, Brim, Rosebery and Lascalles to Patchewollock in the north ... at Lascalles there is a diversion to Woomelang where there are eight mini silos (known to the local farmers as field bins) depicting the endangered species of the region. The trip can be done in any direction. Each work of art stands by itself.

Some Tips:
* the entire journey can be done in a day. There is no reason, apart from personal pleasure, to linger longer than half an hour at any site. What you are looking at is basically huge images of faces and people which have been painted on the sides of concrete grain silos.
* it is sensible to do the journey starting in the morning. Most of the paintings are best lit during the day. This will never be perfect. The images at Rupanyup are at a different angle to the rest of the silos and the images at Lascelles (of local farming couple – Geoff and Merrilyn Horman) can never be photographed together because they are on opposite sides of two of the grain silos.
* they are all ideal for photographers – impressive large grain silos on a flat landscape. Only tips: a wide angle lens is helpful (particularly if you want to avoid power lines at Rupanyup) and some Photoshop “transform” to correct the inevitable “lean” produced by photographing huge objects from ground level.
* There is a really excellent publication – Silo Art Trail Visitor Map – which can be obtained from the Visitor Information Centres either in Horsham or Warracknabeal. The following information has been taken from that publication.

About Each of the Murals on the major murals
Rupanyup
Located on Gibson Street (easily seen to the east of the Wimmera Highway at the northern end of the main street) this is one of the simplest of the murals. It was created by Russian mural artist, Julia Volchkova, and depicts two local sporting team members – Ebony Baker and Jordan Weidemann. It was completed in 2017 and is located on two Australian Grain Export steel grain silos. A singular difference - all the other art works are on cement silos which date from 1938-1939.

Sheep Hills
There is a sign off the Stawell-Warracknabeal Road to what is the most photographed and most admired of all the murals. It was painted by Melbourne-based artist Adnate’s (that’s his name) and I suspect that part of its appeal is that it is striking - it is in brilliant and bright colours. Historically Adnate has often painted indigenous people and when commissioned to paint these silos, which were built in 1939, he developed a relationship with the local Barengi Gadjin Land Council and, in 2016, he painted these huge images of Wergaia Elder (Uncle Ron Marks), a Wotjobaluk Elder (Aunty Regina Hood) and two children – Savannah Marks and Curtly McDonald. In the photographs I have added some people to give an idea of the scale of the work which took only four weeks to complete.

Brim
In 2015 van Helten painted 30-metre high portraits of four farmers on the disused Brim silos. They were the first and started the trend which led to the others being painted. The disused silos had been built in 1939 by GrainCorp. 
Van Helten, a Brisbane artist, used a super cherrypicker for three weeks in 2016 to create the work using spray paint and acrylic house paint. He has worked for up to 10 hours a day in temperatures which reached 40°C and strong winds to produce the mural. 
Upon seeing the result, the Brim Active Community Group president Shane Wardle, whose family has farmed in the town since 1894, reckoned it was the biggest thing to ever happen in the town of about 100 people and a welcome boost at a time of drought and shrinking population. 
The project came to Brim by accident. Van Helten has done similar giant portraits in Ukraine, Norway, Italy, Denmark and Iceland, and he asked street artist management company Juddy Roller to find him silos in Victoria.
GrainCorp came up with a disused silos at Brim, which dominate the town facing west over the highway. Funds were provided by Regional Arts Victoria and the Yarriambiack Shire Council, paint was donated by Taubmans and Loop Paints, and the local caravan park and pub provided free accommodation and meals.
Van Helten took photos of locals and mapped the work on computer, but a challenge was to accommodate the silos' curves.
Shane Wardle said the identities of the three men and one woman depicted were known but had not been publicised. "It's about the art," he said. "It's trying to capture the spirit of the local area. And he's done a great job." The amusing thing was that it started a trend. 

Rosebery
Located beside the Henty Highway in this tiny settlement, the Rosebery mural was painted by Melbourne artist, Kaff-eine (a woman), who came to the Wimmera Mallee with fellow artist Rone who was painting the silos at Lascelles. There are two images – one of a young female farmer in a work shirt, jeans and cowboy boots and one of a horseman in an Akubra hat, Bogs boots and an oilskin vest, with his horse. The two images are symbols of the local people who work on the farms in the surrounding area.

Lascelles
Located off Sunraysia Highway, and easily seen from the road, are these two images of local farming couple, Greg and Merrilyn Horman. Painted by Melbourne artist, Rone (a man), it was completed in 2017 using the GrainCorp silos which had been built in 1939. They are intentionally low key (which is typical of Rone’s work). He added water to the paint to give both images a ghostly, slightly transparent and monochrome effect.

Woomelang Field Bin Silo Art
Located at 67 Brook Street, the field bin silo art (or mini silo art) comprises eight mini silos (known to the local farmers as field bins) with murals depicting the endangered species of the region.
These art works include:
* a pygmy possum painted by Bryan Itch
* a heath monitor painted by Andrew J Bourke
* a Mallee Emu-Wren painted by Jimmy Dvate 
* a spotted tailed quoll painted by Kaff-eine

Patchewollock
Completed in late 2016 this mural was painted by Fintan Magee, a Brisbane artist, who, after meeting a number of locals, decided that he wanted to paint a local sheep and grain farmer, Nick ‘Noodle’ Hulland. Magee chose Hulland not only because he saw him as a symbol of the local farmer (sun-bleached hair, flannelette shirt) but, very conveniently, because he was tall and lean, a frame that would easily fit on the 35-metre grain silo.

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History

* Prior to the arrival of Europeans, the area was home to people from the Wergaia and Wotjobaluk First Nations peoples.

* Closer settlement of the district, which occurred in the 1870s, saw the settlement come into existence with a hotel and general store. At the time it was known as “Cronomby Tanks” .

* The name of the town was changed in 1897 to Woomelang.

* The local post office was opened in 1900.

* The Woomelang Football Club was formed in 1904.

* During World War II, due to a lack of suitable materials, a shearing shed was made from pressed egg tins.

* In 1981 the Woomelang Magistrates Court closed.

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Visitor Information

There is no Visitor Information Centre in Woomelang. The closest are the Warracknabeal Tourist Information Centre is located at 119 Scott Street, Warracknabeal. It is open seven days from 9.00 am - 5.00 pm, tel: (03) 5398 1632.

Horsham and Grampians Visitor Information Centre is located at 20 O'Callaghan's Parade, Horsham, tel: (03) 5382 1832 or 1800 633 218.

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Useful Websites

There is an excellent and useful brochure with a map and details of the town's attractions which can be accessed as a PDF on https://www.yarriambiack.vic.gov.au/Engage-With-Us/Discover-Yarriambiack/Townships-To-Visit/Woomelang.

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