KEY POINTS
- Hobart's Dark Mofo festival will be put on hold in 2024.
- Two key events will still go ahead.
- Organisers say the festival has faced "escalating costs" and will return in 2025 after it is "reshaped".
Popular Hobart winter festival Dark Mofo will be put on hold next year as organisers shift to a more sustainable model.
They made the announcement on Friday, saying the festival intends to return fully in 2025 and "set the foundation for the next 10 years".
The festival says despite record attendance and box office sales this year, it is essential to take stock of changing conditions and rising costs and to reset for the future.
"Since Dark Mofo’s inception back in 2013, the festival has felt the weight of shifting conditions and the burden of escalating costs," the Dark Mofo website states.
"The success of 2023 brought with it the realisation that we cannot continue to deliver Dark Mofo to the standards we have set under these conditions."
The nude solstice swim will still go ahead in 2024 despite the cancellation. Source: AAP / Ethan James
"These two key events will also coincide with the opening of a new major exhibition at the Museum of Old and New Art," the festival said in a statement.
Dark Mofo artistic director Chris Twite said the state government had been proactive in offering solutions to proceed with the festival in 2024.
But ultimately the organisers opted for a reduced scope that would honour Dark Mofo's strong commitment to local community and small businesses, he said.
Dark Mofo's organiser made the announcement on Friday, saying the festival intends to return fully in 2025 and "set the foundation for the next 10 years". Source: AAP / Rob Blakers
"Dark Mofo has always been dedicated to enriching and transforming lives through ambitious art and ideas.
"We want to make sure that we have a festival that continues to deliver incredible art and artists, that continues to expand its artistic boundaries and remains a beacon of creativity, innovation, and cultural significance.
"While this was a tough decision, it ensures we move forward in a viable manner."
Twite was announced as artistic director in April, replacing Leigh Carmichael who had been in the role since the inaugural festival a decade ago.