Crafted and created by the acclaimed design studio Mandylights, it is set against the backdrop of Moama’s Horseshoe Lagoon and is a sound and light trail sharing stories from across the region through state-of-the-art installations, projections and cutting-edge moving light technology.
Mandylights is a studio that has excelled in many large projects. It has worked with some of the world’s leading musical artists, including the The Backstreet Boys’ Las Vegas residency from 2017 to 2019 and the 2022 European tour for Thundercat.
This year’s Moama Lights display is inspired by the Banjo Patterson poem The Daylight is Dying.
The spectacle begins at twilight, giving you the opportunity to see the landscape and the nature through a different and equally beautiful lens.
The event will see the return of spectacular Indigenous artworks crafted by the talented hands of First Nations artist Warrick Keen and, once again, the brilliant Alkina Edwards, a contemporary Yorta Yorta artist from Echuca Moama.
Complementing the light show again this year is the hotly anticipated ice skating rink, which opens tomorrow.
Moama Lights runs on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights only during July. A special low sensory experience will be offered on July 18.
Tickets for Moama Lights are $22 for adults, $11 for children aged 3-16 and $55 for a family of two adults and two children. Children under three can attend for free, but you must indicate their attendance when purchasing your ticket.
The ice skating rink will be set up at Moama’s Kerrabee Soundshell, with 24 skating days on offer between June 29 and July 25.
For more information and to purchase tickets, go to www.visitthemurray.com.au and click on the Moama Lights tab.