OLIVIA J. BENNETT


Hello! I’m an arts writer, researcher and critic based in Brisbane, Australia. 

I've reviewed and written about art, film, music, and digital culture in Australian and international publications. I’ve also played a pivotal role in the programming, digital production, and successful delivery of numerous projects within Australia’s film and music industry.

I'm fascinated by how global trends intertwine with personal stories, revealing the impact of cultural issues on our daily lives. In my work, I prefer to experiment with non-linear storytelling, multiple perspectives, and mixed media to capture the intricacy of modern cultural tensions.

I’ve been honoured to participate in Gertrude Contemporary’s Emerging Writers Program and the Melbourne International Film Festival’s Critics Campus.

I'm also a freelance copywriter, content writer, and strategist whose work is driven by principles of complexity and interconnectedness.

With five years of freelancing, three years in agency environments, and two years navigating Melbourne's strictest COVID-19 lockdowns, I've faced real tests of resilience and adaptability in my career. This experience has enriched my ability to develop copywriting, content, and strategy for various sectors, including tech, health, lifestyle, retail, design, construction, hospitality and (of course) the arts.

I completed a Bachelor of Art History and Curating at Monash University, majoring in Film Studies. For my BA Honours thesis in Screen and Cultural Studies at Melbourne University, I argued that the documentary films of Harvard University’s Sensory Ethnography Lab are hyperobjects. Applying Timothy Morton’s concept through poetics, I explored their capacity to provoke a transgressive experience of ecological thought and feeling.

On a personal note, I'm on track to pass the DELF B2 French exam in 2025, and I am currently working on launching new business ventures that will further leverage my expertise and passions.

Souhaitez-moi bonne chance!

LURE


Lures are confusing. They’re mimetic in how they try to replicate the amphibious and memetic in the shapeshifting play they engage with. At first cast, their performance feels calculatedly vulnerable, even as their purpose remains crystal clear. It’s this very calculation that slips through your fingers—a chasm of desire and denial ignited by the anxious churn of choppy water, with Bundy rum sloshing in the boat’s bowels and the chum, both fish and friend, surfacing along the way. 

Exhibition text (Front). Retrieved from Outer Space website. 
 Image Courtesy of the artists. 
Exhibition text (Back). Retrieved from Outer Space website.

YOU, ME & EUGENE


It’s the same loop of never-ending think pieces blaming social media for our alienation—"the internet controls everything," then, "the internet isn’t real life." Well, which is it? The Code forces these anal-gazing auteurs to confront themselves, answering back with: "You signed up for this, remember?"

Still from The Code (2024), dir. Eugene Kotlyarenko, featuring Peter Vack and Dasha Nekrasova.

VULTURES 2

Kanye West & Ty Dolla $ign




Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign’s Vultures 2 stumbles under the weight of its predecessor's hype, perfectly failing a reverse Bechdel test. The album’s delayed release—a now typical move for the duo—only adds to the disservice. What was once a world of sonic innovation feels rushed and uninspired, with tracks like "PROMOTION" and "HUSBAND" not only objectify women but cross into a more sinister, coercive narrative. Lyrics like “I just put your b**** on another b**** and hit ‘em both” or “All you really need is a husband/The only thought you ever need is ‘I trust him’” highlight this disturbing shift. Despite technically polished production, the album lacks careful consideration. "SKY HIGH" offers a fleeting moment of sincerity through its interpolation of The Five Stairsteps' "O-o-h Child" with the line, "Ooh, child, things are going to get easier." Ultimately, Vultures 2 is blinded by self-indulgence, leaving listeners with little more than a hollow echo of what once was.




SEASHELL ANGEL 
LUCKY CHARM

Armlock




Melbourne duo Armlock have returned with new LP Seashell Angel Lucky Charm. The album expands on the intricate world built on their last record Trust (2021), with chord-forward melodies, steady beats, angelic harmonies, and intricate noise elements infused with whimsical vocal snippets. Like Trust,  Seashell Angel Lucky Charm radiates a bittersweet charm, but perhaps a bit more bitter this time, with Simon Lam’s lead vocals front and centre—muted, reserved, yet masterful. His tone is soothing, like scratching a soft, satisfying itch. The introspective, indie-rock sensibility of Something For Kate’s Echolalia is present in the lyrics that navigate the battle for space in one’s mind, a tug-of-war between fears and desires. Whether it's the feeling of being stuck in an open door in ‘Guardian,’  turning a step into a pirouette to ‘Godsend’s’ synthy piano, locking elbows in ‘Fear, or the imagery of being ankle-deep in ‘Ice Cold’, this album delicately dances between idolatry and iconoclasm. It’s an album about loving purposefully yet unrequitedly, and an exercise in seeing devotion as a pattern of release and capture. 

C, XOXO

Camilla Cabello




Since leaving Fifth Harmony in 2018, Camila Cabello shot to fame with ‘Señorita’ featuring Shawn Mendes, a track that owes its two billion Spotify listens more to department store airplay than genuine acclaim. Cabello’s fourth album, C, XOXO, runs on empty emotions, speeding full tilt with no direction, enlisting every trick in the book. The single ‘I LUV IT’ featuring Playboi Carti is perhaps redeemable, more of an earworm than the rest of the album. There are lots of cameos here: BLP Kosher contributes a 46-second track with a superficial narrative of loss. Drake pops up on ‘HOT UPTOWN’ but also bizarrely has a solo track ‘Uuugly’ in the middle of the album. The track titles, ranging from lowercase to uppercase, reflect the album’s manic nature. Themes of 00s nostalgia and the I’m just a girl sentiment abound, especially in tracks like ‘DREAM-GIRL’ and “Twentysomethings.” The album is dismal, a clear cry of desperation from a declining industry plant.

RECESSION POP
IS MAKING A COMEBACK


As we navigate today’s financial challenges, the recession pop revival captures our collective longing for nostalgia, but also signals a desire to go deeper in our sonic storytelling. 

Kesha, ‘JOYRIDE’ (2024)

BRAT

Charli XCX




With over a decade under her belt, the people’s party princess Charli XCX’s Brat has firmly secured her position in pop’s hall of fame. Rallying a 19-piece girl gang of pop culture’s off-kilter elite for the launch of headline track "360," Charli defines a unique vision of womanhood. Not one to mince words, the album captures the silly, sad, sexy, and sensational feelings of being a girl while delicately reinventing genre-worn tropes. Featuring nasty synths, electro-disco beats, frenetic bass, and 00s earworms, all supported by producer A.G. Cook, it’s a masterclass in modern pop. From the anxieties of missing out on motherhood in “I think about it all the time” (I think I might run out of time / But I finally met my baby / And a baby might be mine), to “Girl, so confusing” exploring the compassionate competitiveness of female friendships, to “So I” paying a painfully honest tribute to late collaborator SOPHIE, and “Guess” exploiting the playful power dynamics of desire, Charli struck untouched chords with this decade-defining album.

DENNIS

Sega Bodega




Sega Bodega returns feverishly with his third, folkloric album Dennis, the product of a self-professed manic episode. We ride scattered highs with tracks like ‘Adulter8’, which fuse Bodega’s industrial, bass-heavy stylings with 8-bit melodies – a nod to the artist’s name and a broader feeling of insatiable yearning. Dancehall beats mix with chopped and screwed vocals, roller-coasting high and low in ‘Elk Skin’, before speeding into the hectic BPM and rambling lyricism of ‘Kepko’. Most impressive is ‘Tears & Sighs’, where Bodega’s deep voice convincingly pleads, “Give into me, give into me,” as a throbbing club beat builds. Suddenly, dropping into acoustic guitar, we’re pushed away by “Don’t talk to me, don’t even look at me”. Flinging between these opposites, Bodega blurs the line between nostalgia and fantasy, tradition and experimentation, ecstasy and misery to produce a beautifully tortured release. It’s only in the final track, ‘Coma Salv’, with its twinkling keys and soft resonance, that we find rest, sinking into an otherworld Bodega seems desperately striving to reach.

REAL POWER

Gossip




Gossip's new record Real Power carries a title suggesting potency, but it veers from the thunderous impact of their seminal 2009 hit ‘Heavy Cross.’ Helmed by the industry patriarch Rick Rubin, the album retains the group’s signature blend of funky punk revival and Beth Ditto's soulful vocals, albeit in a more subdued manner. Real Power cruises through clean lyricism, showcasing a variety of influences spanning punk, pop, funk, disco, and R&B. The resulting sound is an amalgamation that stupefies more than it mesmerises. While Real Power lacks the energetic fervour synonymous with Gossip's past work, it appears intentional, suggesting a shift towards more introspective songwriting. In ‘Turn The Card Slowly’, alongside reverberating guitar and minimalist base, Beth Ditto croons, "We had a plan, we said we’d settle down / Baby, that was then, and this is now." As the album progresses, Ditto’s vocals accumulate weight, imparting wisdom on lost connections and faltered opportunities. The message? Real power transcends force, finding its essence in tranquillity. 

TONY KAYE IN CONVERSATION


“I had taken on the system, and I wanted to completely go against it. But wanting it was one thing... achieving it turned out to be completely shocking to me.” 

- Tony Kaye


Photography: Hero Bean Stevenson.
Photography: Hero Bean Stevenson.