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Inawinytji Williamson Walka Putitja - Wiltja Nyina. Image courtesy of Better World Arts.
5 November - 16 December 2008
Better World Arts presents works by emerging artists from the Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Association, and launches their outreach programs for the Adelaide Anangu community. Better World Arts Gallery.
Until 8 February 2009
Ng woka, woka nganin: I am the land & the land is me is an exhibition showcasing traditionally inspired Aboriginal works by four Victorian Aboriginal women - Lee Darrock, Debra Couzens, Vicki Couzens and Maree Clarke - illustrating their strong connections to country and to each other. Some of the traditionally inspired works featured in the exhibition have not been made for over 220 years and include kangaroo tooth necklaces, echidna quill necklaces, emu feather skirts, string and wooden women's bags, feather flowers, and kangaroo and possum skin cloaks. Bunjilaka at Melbourne Museum.
Destiny Deacon, Where's Mickey. Image courtesy of The Art Gallery of New South Wales.
21 November 2008 - 22 February 2009
Photography by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists has emerged over the past two decades as a definitive expression of contemporary Indigenous life in Australia. Half Light is the first major survey of the work of Indigenous artists engaging with the photographic medium and the portrait. The exhibition brings together over 140 works by 15 of Australia's most renowned Indigenous artists. Art Gallery of New South Wales.
August 2008
FORM's Indigenous Development Program, running since 2005, is based on the need to promote intercultural celebration of Indigenous artists and their families in Western Australia. Currently encompassed by The Canning Stock Route Project, projects are implemented in collaboration with remote and regional art centres. Projects are mostly facilitated out-bush and 'in-country' - taking the aims and principles of Creative Capital to the remote regions of WA.
Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, Gurrumul, solo album. Image courtesy of Skinny Fish Music.
April 2008
The voice of Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu has been described as 'a gift from the gods'. Geoffrey, or Gudjuk as he is also called, is from Gumatj in North East Arnhem Land. A former member of Yothu Yindi, now with Saltwater Band (Elcho Island), Gurrumul's first solo album highlights his amazing talent as a singer/songwriter/musician. His beautiful voice singing the songs of his Gumatj country will never leave you ... 'it is as though Yunupingu has reached into a wellspring so deep it transcends cultural barriers'. (Bruce Elder, SMH, 12-13 April, 2008)
March 2008
Bea Maddock has etched the entire coastline of Tasmania with Terra Spiritus... with darker shade of pale, 1993-98, a fifty-one sheet red-ochre pastel drawing that forms a fully encircling panorama, almost 40 metres in extent. Distant inland mountains are reflected out onto the sea towards an imaginary viewer in a small boat. Blind-printed, inconspicuous lettering identifies mostly minor landscape features named by Europeans; curling along the mid-line of the work, hand-drawn Palawa words of the Tasmanian Aborigines. Her local earth, hand-ground and rubbed into delicate scratches in the paper, echoes Indigenous cosmetic use of redness. Art Gallery of South Australia.
March 2008
The Australia Council for the Arts has revised its protocol Guides that assist people understand how to use Indigenous cultural material. The five Guides cover protocols for producing Indigenous Australian media arts, music performing arts, visual arts and writing. They were written for the Australia Council by Indigenous intellectual property lawyers Terri Janke and Robynne Quiggin.
Artist unknown, Tasmanian Aboriginal basket. Image courtesy of Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
The new Tasmanian Aboriginal Gallery presents visitors with a rich, enlightening and inspiring experience. Ningenneh Tunapry means 'to give knowledge and understanding'. The gallery explores the journey of Tasmanian Aboriginal people and is a celebration of all Tasmanian Aboriginal generations - past, present and future. Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
Entries by 15 January 2009 (full papers), event 6-8 March 2009
Selling Yarns 2: Innovation for sustainability is a conference that addresses contemporary Indigenous craft and design practice. It draws on the outcomes of the first Selling Yarns conference held in Darwin in 2006 that looked specifically at contemporary Indigenous textile practice. The conference will highlight the work of Indigenous makers from the south-eastern region of Australia and parallel the directions in practice of urban Indigenous makers with that of artists in remote communities.
Entries ongoing
This Scholarship offers Indigenous people in NSW the opportunity to enrol in Metro Screen training courses to the value of $1,000 each. To apply for the Scholarship, complete an application form (PDF) identifying the course of study and reasons for selecting the course. Scholarships are awarded on a first come, first served basis. Courses are listed on the Metro Screen website.
21 November 2008
Booderee National Park won the prestigious 2008 NSW Indigenous Tourism Award. The Award was presented at a gala ceremony in Sydney last night before 700 people representing the NSW Tourism industry. Booderee is owned by Wreck Bay Aboriginal Community and jointly managed with the Australian Government. Traditional owners Bernie McLeod and Lorraine Ardler accepted the Award on behalf of their community and the park.
6 November 2008
Lives of the Papunya Tula Artists chronicles the beginnings of the Western Desert art movement and the phenomenal development of its founding art company over four decades. Through comprehensive and widely researched biographies of more than 200 men and women the book illuminates lives balanced between first contact and international stardom, poverty and record auction prices. Since the early 1970s, Papunya Tula Artists Pty Ltd has made a profound contribution to the Western Desert art movement and international contemporary art.
Image courtesy of the ABC.
16 October 2008
An auction of Aboriginal art in Melbourne has raised more than $250,000 for research into Indigenous health. Proceeds from the sale of the 14 artworks will go towards the Darwin-based Menzies School of Health Research.
Begins 14 October 2008
SBS' new seven-part documentary series First Australians is exploring the history of white colonialists and their interactions with Australian Aboriginals. It shows how cultures meet, the friendships which form despite immense differences and how they are quickly shattered in the contest for land and survival. It is clear the conquerors are here to stay.
8 October 2008
Winners of the 14th annual Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander awards have been announced at a ceremony held at the Sydney Opera House. The awards celebrate Indigenous excellence in music, sport, entertainment and community achievement. In 2008, winners included folk singer Gurrumul Yunupingu who won Artist of the Year, Album of the Year and Single of the Year for the song History (I Was Born Blind). Also Most Promising New Talent went to country artist Adam James and The Black Arm Band took out Band of the Year.
26 September 2008
SBS announced it will commence national consultations with Indigenous communities to get inspiration and formulate ideas for a long-term Indigenous content strategy for SBS television, radio and online based content around Indigenous languages. This will culminate in a series of initiatives across all platforms including an ambitious television series centred around the promotion, protection and preservation of Indigenous languages envisaged to start production in 2009.
17 September 2008
A Darwin first-time author has won the nation's highest-paid Indigenous writer's prize with a satirical look at life in the missions. Marie Munkara's book Every Secret Thing was awarded the $15,000 David Unaipon prize in Queensland last night.
9 September 2008
Rare Indigenous language lists are now available via the State Library of New South Wales' unique Indigenous Australians online collection. While many of the 250 Indigenous languages spoken in Australia have been lost over time, the Library has traced fragments of these languages in first-hand accounts written by British naval officers, surveyors and missionaries. This project is supported by the Rio Tinto Aboriginal Fund. State Library of New South Wales (NSW) unique Indigenous Australians online collection.
8 September 2008
From the big screen to the web, the Yolngu people of Ramingining now have a place on the Internet following the launch of the 12 Canoes website today. The 12 Canoes site gives the world access to an immersive and engaging view to celebrate the culture, art and history of one of world's the oldest existing people - the Yolngu - whose homeland is the town of Ramingining and the Arafura Swamp of north-central Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory. Inside Film 8 Sept 2008.
August 2008
Iwaidja artist Christine Christopherson has been selected as the second Australian ever to be offered an artist residency at the Joseph and Anni Albers Foundation studio in Connecticut, USA - supported by the Australia Council for the Arts. Lydia Miller, Executive Director of the Australia Council's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Division, said Christopherson joins a select group of artists who have worked at the estate of the late Bauhaus School artists - Joseph and Anni Albers. 'This residency is a once in a lifetime opportunity for Christine to work in one of the world's leading residential art studios and develop her practice,' she said. A visual artist from Darwin whose past works have been inspired by her staunch opposition to mining in Kakadu National Park, Christopherson's works are currently on display in Culture Warriors - Australia's first National Indigenous Art Triennial.
August 2008
The Australia Council for the Arts' Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Board is conducting a review of its key organisations funding program, Making Solid Ground. Input from people and organisations with an interest in support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists is being sought. Two papers have been released to date: a discussion paper, to invite conversation about how best to invest in infrastructure support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts, and an issues paper, to help guide input about the issues that matter to future support for Indigenous arts in this country. These are the first step in a nationwide consultation process for the review.
14 August 2008
Arts Minister Peter Garrett and Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin announced more than $37 million in funding for Indigenous arts, cultural, languages and broadcasting programs across Australia in 2008-09. Visiting the Kurruru Youth Performing Arts Centre in Port Adelaide Mr Garrett said the funding, through four Government programs, would support the activities of almost 250 organisations providing invaluable support, services and programs to Indigenous Australians.
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