
The Immigration Museum’s exhibition, Order Up – a city fed by many cultures, looks at Melbourne’s hospitality industry through the lens of migration, memory and everyday service.
Now open to the public, it traces how kitchens and dining rooms across the city have long reflected the movement of people and culture.
The archive
At the centre of the exhibition are hundreds of handwritten dockets gathered from 33 restaurants, each one representing a small exchange between cooks, waitstaff and diners. The collection includes venues such as France-Soir, Abla’s, Pellegrini’s Espresso Bar, Supper Inn, The Horn, Chae, Taverna, Rumi and Pastuso.
Visitors can move through a space filled with projected film and layered audio, blending the sounds of service, clinking cutlery, open flames, conversation and the mix of languages that define Melbourne dining.
Daniel Saade and Redmond Stevenson
Order Up was created by Melbourne artists Daniel Saade and Redmond Stevenson.
Saade, a third-generation restaurateur and grandson of Lebanese immigrants, runs café Niche on Bridge and continues his family’s connection to hospitality.
Stevenson, a cinematographer who has spent years documenting restaurant life, contributes film and sound design that capture the texture of kitchen work and the humanity behind it.
“Anyone can come here and find language through hospitality,” says Saade. “With Order Up we want visitors to find their familiar and embrace the unfamiliar, framing these humble slips of paper into something captivating.
“Every docket bares the human connections behind it, the late-night and early morning friendships formed, the family recipes and traditions shared.”
Their collaboration came naturally after thirty years of friendship and a shared love of food, hospitality and Melbourne. Stevenson’s cinematography brings the energy and character of the city’s kitchens to life.
Stories of arrival, identity and belonging
Museums Victoria CEO and Director Lynley Crosswell says: “Order Up is a tribute to the people who work around the clock to feed and nourish Melbourne, from those who came before to the newcomers.
“With stories of arrival, identity and belonging embedded in its walls, Immigration Museum is a perfect home for this exhibition, and we welcome it with open arms.”
Minister for Creative Industries Colin Brooks says the exhibition reflects Victoria’s cultural diversity. “Victoria is better and stronger for the many cultures and communities that make up our state. Victorians come from more than 300 ancestries, speak 290 languages and follow almost 200 different faiths, providing our state with a rich and unique social tapestry,” he says.
“Order Up is a unique creative celebration of the food we love and the culinary talent behind it.”
Order Up – a city fed by many cultures is now open at the Immigration Museum, 400 Flinders Street, Melbourne.
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