Warlukurlangu Artists
Emerging from the heart of central Australia is the most exciting and dynamic development in modern Australian art. The materials are modern -acrylic on canvas. But the content is traditional - mythical and ritual.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Jukurrpa
Jujurrpa is a Warlpri word meaning Dreaming and it is the Dreamtime stories that are depicted on the canvases of a group of Warlpri, Pitjantjatjara, Luritja and Anmatyerre women from the Alice Springs area.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Keringke Arts
Looks at the Santa Teresa Community 80 kilometres south of Alice Spring and home of the Arrernte people where the Keringke Arts Centre was established in 1987.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Tiwi Designs
Bathurst and Melville Islands lie of the north coast of Australia about 100 kms from Darwin. They are the home to the Tiwi. As a result of the isolation of Tiwi people their culture has developed independently from others on the mainland. This is reflected in their art which is very bold.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Yolngu Women Artists
If the 70s is remembered as a period of nurture for Aboriginal art, the 1980s will certainly be remembered as the decade of its dramatic development...there has been an eflorescence of community based enterprises in the remote areas of Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Maningrida: Traditions Open to Change
Maningrida Art and Craft is synonymous with the best of contemporary traditional Aboriginal bark painting and sculpture, both major individual works and important collections.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Kinship and the Dreaming
Looks at a family history project beginning with the Koonibba Mission in South Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Money, Corruption and Authenticity
Whatever capital city one may visit these days, there will usually be an art gallery exhibiting works from the latest Aboriginal art movement. The demand for Aboriginal painting has probably doubled every year over the past decade and nowhere is this more evident than in central Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
To Clean a Rusty ANCAA
The Association of Northern and Central Australian Aboriginal Artists.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
FAIRA: Cultural Heritage Initiatives in Queensland
The Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action is an independent Aboriginal community based and controlled organisation located in Brisbane Queensland.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Superstar or Generic
Should art centres cater more for the few 'Top Quality' artists that each has or should they support and encourage artistic activities by all who are interested?
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
The Aboriginal Copyright Cases
At the 1988 Conference in Broome the author spoke of the growing unlawful use of Aboriginal art by T shirt companies and the fashion industry generally.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Copyright and Issues of Appropriation
This is the text of the Copyright session given at the National Aboriginal Artists Forum Art Gallery of Western Australia February 1989.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aurukun and Comalco
This is a critical time in the history of the wider region of Cape York Peninsula.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Review of the Review
In 1989, Jon Altman, Chris McGuigan and Peter Yu were asked by the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs to look into the viability of the Aboriginal Arts and Crafts industry, to point to ways to improve its efficiency and effectiveness and to advise which government programs could give cost effective support to the industry and to recommend managing and marketing strategies.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Pitchat and Beyond
Until recently, Pitjantjatjara communities had very limited acces to or influence from mainstream media, communications, technology and information systems. English is still a foreign language to most of the population and functional levels of literacy are very low.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Poetry in Review
Aboriginal poet Ken Canning ( Burraga Gutya) looks at the nature of poetry. 3 poems of Burraga Gutya included in the issue.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
The Struggle Continues
In every area of the arts where Aborigines are participating there is an intense surge of creative vitality. Once could call it a renaissance period. When I began writing poetry, Kath Walker (Oodgeroo Noonucul) was the only recognised poet.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Murris' Coming Out Show
Hello. My name is Marshall Bell. I live at Inala in Queensland. My father was from the famous Jiman Tribe of Hornet Hill massacre mob. My mother was from the Kamilaroi nation Gunedah/Kooma clans. I was born at the now defunct Charleville Aboriginal reserve in the desert of south west Queensland. Having been living off my art for the last 5 years in a suppressive Queensland environment, I think I know what it is like to be living in isolation.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
A Playwrights Story
"In January 1989, I attended the second national Black Playwrights conference. I arrived at this conference feeling very unsure and insecure with nine small scenes which I had hoped would turn in to a play."
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Jabiru
"I joined the Jabiru Cabaret in Cairns as one of the ten founding cast members in November 1988. The excitement for me as a performer, is to bridge the gap of understanding between various races, colours, cultures and countries. To witness the audience reaction to us as a group performing in three distinct areas makes us all feel very close to achieving the message of a minority through our art."
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
ANTT Aboriginal National Theatre Trust Limited
The Aboriginal National Theatre Trust Limited arose out of Forums of Aboriginal Performing Artists, Playwrights and Technicians attending the first National Black Playwrights Conference held at the Australian National University in Canberra 1987.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Theatre in Tasmania
"From the time that whites arrived in Tasmania and up until 1983 Aboriginal performing arts especially theatre arts, had become almost as extinct as whites would have people believe Tasmanian Aborigines were. Not so!"
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Music; Broome Style: Towards Bran Nue Dae
Broome, sleepy, dusty, sub-tropical country town on the north west of Western Australia, with a population of only 7,000 has at least 5 working bands including the well known bands Kuckles and Scrap Metal - a myriad of solo performers as well as traditional Aboriginal musicians.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Rock Festival
It's now early September 1989 and Aboriginal Rock Bands from the Northern Territory and interstate are travelling by any means possible to Darwin for the Sing Loud Play Strong 2nd Festival of Aboriginal Rock Music.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Radio Redfern - The Koori Voice in Sydney
Located in an old terrace house in Cope Street Redfern, is the voice of the Aboriginal Community in Sydney. The terrace house is not unlike any other in the inner city. However with the Koori colours on one wall and the music of Koori bands blasting out from its speakers up on the balcony the house is fairly outstanding.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Black Radio in Cairns
Explores Aboriginal radio in far north Queensland.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Night Cries - A Rural Tragedy; A film by Tracey Moffatt
Two people suspended in a soundscape - a space punctuated by a stark and corrosive sound. The wail of a dingo, an owl, the grating beat of an iron lung, a gasp, a cry for breath and above all a cacophony of memory.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Australia to the World
In the choice of Rover Thomas and Trevor Nickolls to echibit in the Australian Pavilion at the 1990 Venice Biennale, Australia will present a combination that challenges many conventional attitudes to Aboriginal art. Simultaneously the exhibition offers an appropriate platform to two important if highly idiosyncratic contemporary painters.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Letter From Arnhem Land Where All the Real Art's Supposed To Be
"How many people still think that up north or in the centre is the only place for real Aboriginal art. You know when you work with it, selling it, buying it, you hear it all the time."
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
The Bicentenary and Beyond: Recent Developments in Aboriginal Printmaking
The period of 1986 - 1989 has been epoch making for Aboriginal printmaking, not necessarily because of an improvement in the quality of the prints produced during that time but because Aboriginal prints in forums broadly motivated by the centenary has allowed them to receive the recognition they deserve.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Balance Stories
Two alternative opinions on Australia's most obvious cultural exchange - Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal- was the original conception of Balance 1990 Views, Visions, Influences - a collaborative exhibition originally titled Balance 1988: Two views One Vision. Beginning by artists sitting and talking it became obvious that there were more than just two perspectives.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Balance 1990
Exhibition review Balance 1990 held at Queensland Art Gallery and curated by Michael Eather and Marlene Hall, March 1990.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Mecca for Printmakers
Looks at the Canberra School of Art Print Workshop has played a key role in encouraging Aboriginal artist to make prints.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
From Yuendumu to Paris
Explores a historic trip for six traditional artists from Australia for the exhibition 'Magicians of the Earth'. This global overview was created to "reveal the force of communication" and was true to its title.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Lin Onus - Cultural Mechanic
Contemplating the work of Lin Onus the artist, the arts administrator and the panel beating mechanic.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Mural at Port Lincoln: Kerry Giles and Melanie Howard
Kerry Giles and Melanie Howard talking to Felicity Wright about the mural in Port Lincoln South Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Kurwingie
Article by the artist about her art practice.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Peter Dabah
Dabah was the Aboriginal Artist in residence at the Flinders University 1989 - 1990.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Robert Campbell Junior
The artist talks about his art practice.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Milton Budge
Looks at the art practice of Milton Budge.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Two Profiles from Cairns: Tatipai Barsa and Zane Saunders
Looks at the art practice of two artists from the Cairns College of TAFE and the Associate Diploma of Art.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Les Griggs
Examines the paintings of Les Griggs.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Judy Watson
Looks at the paintings of Judy Watson.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Shane Pickett
Looks at the works of West Australian artist Shane Pickett.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Wanjidari
Looks at the art practice of Wanjidari.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Ellen Jose
The artist writes about her art practice.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Donna Leslie
Looks at the art practice of Donna Leslie.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Gordon Bennett: Expressions of Constructed Identity
Gordon Bennett interviewed on the development of his work.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Maree Clarke
Looks at the art practice of Maree Clarke.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Power Institute Program on Aboriginal Art in Australian Society
The Power Institute at the University of Sydney ran a 10 week program devised by Susan Simons and Bronwyn Bancroft of panel discussions, presentations, films/videos and seminars exploring many of the issues of Aboriginal art in Australian society.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Gayle Maddigan
Looks at the art practice of Victorian artist Gayle Maddigan.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Narrangunnawali in Canberra
Narrangunnawali was an exhibition by Aboriginal artists from Canberra and the surrounding region mounted by the Canberra Contemporary Art Space 31 August - 23 September 1989.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Sally Morgan Speaks
The artist speaks about her art practice.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Designer Aboriginals
Looks at her art practice and design issues, copyright and textiles.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Jumbana Designs
John and Ros Moriarty of Jumbuna Designs in interview.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Desert Designs
Examines the Desert Designs Company formed by Stephen Culley and David Wroth which began in the early 1980s.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Tandanya: Australia's First Aboriginal Cultural Institute
Article which looks at Tandanya - Australia's first Aboriginal Cultural Institute located in Adelaide South Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Boomalli
Looks at the artist's co-operative Boomalli located in Sydney NSW.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Vocational Arts Centre Cairns
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Education Centre in Cairns is a vocational school of Arts aimed at the development and realisation of Aboriginal artistic talent.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Community College - Port Adelaide
The broad aims of the Aboriginal Community College in Port Adelaide, South Australia, are to provide time, space, and resources to Aboriginal people that will allow them to make discoveries about themselves, their heritage and their environment, and to move in directions that they establish as relevant to themselves and/or their community.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Dumbartung Aboriginal Corporation
Dumbartung Aboriginal Corporation meaning 'we of the people' is a West Australian Aboriginal organization which aims to promote dance, drama, writing, painting, sculpture, craftwork, music and any other Aboriginal art...
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music
Located in the University of Adelaide in South Australia the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music was set up in 1972 in order that many aboriginal people both urban and tribal may develp effective skills of communicating their cultural, social, political and economic feelings through music to Australian people and the world at large.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Waringarri Arts Centre
Located in Kununurra Western Australia Waringarri Arts was set up for artists in the Kimberley region.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Birrukmarri
Birukmarri is an exhibition gallery and retail outlet with a commitment to the professional retailing of Aboriginal art.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Art After the Controversy
Looks at the art practice in Moree in north western NSW.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Bangarra
'Bangarra' is a Wiradjeri word meaing to make fire and the dance company so named has sparked enthusiasm for its performances in countries as far afield as Japan, New Guinea, the USA and Finland.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Flinders University of South Australia: Aboriginal Artists in Residence Programme
Describes the vital and valuable Aboriginal artists in residence program at the Flinders University of South Australia.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Arts Unit Australia Council
The Aboriginal Arts Board was dis-established in June 1989...the Australia Council established the Aboriginal Arts Committee to replace the Board.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Bibliography
Supplementary bibliography to the major work by Adrian Marrie 1987 'A Topical bibliography of Australian Aboriginal Visual Arts 3' ed ASTEC SA College of Advanced Education (now the University of South Australia) Underdale SA.
Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art
Cultural Lifestyle as a Taxpayer: 1990 the new era for self responsibility
Polemic for 1990 (in two parts) Part 1 Odours of redundancy Facts and Foibles part 2 Alternatives as suggested in Polemic No 1 Culture tax and Ôknow howÕ
Community Arts
Why do Angels fly Anti-clockwise?
Community arts has been eminently successful with an impressive list of achievements for a field not more than fifteen years old.
Community Arts
Through the Looking Glass: Community art at the Strathmont Centre
Every human being is an artist wrote Joseph Beuys who believed the creativity and its potentially concomitant powers of self determination and freedom are inherent in all people and the most worthy occupation for them.
Community Arts
Community Arts: the Seventies Fad that never went away
The category Ôcommunity artsÕ had no real currency in Australia until it appeared in federal arts policy as a separate funding programme in 1973.
Community Arts
Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras
Over the last 12 years the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras has slowly evolved into a community arts success story. From its beginnings on Stonewall Day in 1978 to the multi functional arts organisation it is now, Mardi Gras continues to develop the culture of gay and lesbian communities who own and manage it.
Community Arts
Reflections on Experience
A conversation for Artlink between Kay Lawrence, Ann Newmarch and Cedar Prest, three South Australian based professional artists who have worked extensively with communities. May 3 1990
Community Arts
Australian Labour Based Art in an International Context.
Artwork produced in conjunction with the labour movement (in common with much community based work) receives little public attention.
Community Arts
Now we are 10 Redback Graphix 10 year anniversary touring exhibition
Redback Graphix was formed in 1979 not as a co-operative or a community based access workshop but as a fully fledged business.
Community Arts
Towards the Yapa Way
Much arts activity in Aboriginal communities revolves around, and is driven by, the forces of the international art market. Looks at the artist in residency programme in the community of Lajamanu in the Northern Territory.
Community Arts
WhatÕs wrong with the Lounge Room? Community arts and Public TV
Television is one of the fundamental cultural realities of our time. Any attempt to deal with Australian cultural life has to come to grips with this phenomenon. Yet to a great extent this has not happened with arts commentators.
Community Arts
Curbin the Urban
An environmental arts project in inner Melbourne, Victoria. Cartoonist Judy Horacek has been employed to create cartoons about the environmental concerns of local residents ranging from the destruction of rain-forests to the dilemma of cremation or burial.
Community Arts
Music by any other name would be as sweet.
If all the arguments about community music that have raged around Australia for the past 15 years or so were laid end to end, they would stretch from the Sydney Opera House to the Hobart Casino, from the Boggabrai Light Opera Company to the Geraldton Recorder Group, from the Rockhampton Youth Orchestra to the Busselton Trade Union Choir and back, forming a veritable spider web tapestry of case histories that neither prove nor disprove any one definition of what community music is or is not.
Community Arts
Community Arts -- Collaborative Design
Written with Michelle Howard Looks at the new Box Hill Community Arts Centre designed by Greg Burgess and Peter Ryan of Greg Burgess and Associates.
Community Arts
Photo Access
Photo Access is a community organisation located close to central Canberra. It offers low cost access to photographic darkroom facilities, course, information and exhibition space.
Community Arts
Gasworks
The Gasworks is located in an 8 acre park on the edge of the sea in South Melbourne. In 1985 the City of South Melbourne adopted a plan to transform the polluted industrial wasteland into a Park and convert the building surrounding its perimeter into artistsÕ studios, workshops, perfomance and exhibition spaces.
Community Arts
Realising Potential in Writing
There is considerable potential for writing-in-the-community and community theatre writing. However, that potential may only be fully achieved if there is a re-evaluation of the aesthetics, processes and products of such writing. The re-evaluation should be based on the assumption that the product should have substance rather than flopsy-bunny triviality. The community arts are worse than useless if they do not have a functional as well as an artistic aspect.
Community Arts
The Evolution of Urban Art
A seven metre alien and a five metre cloaked warrior were two of the sensational pieces in Western AustraliaÕs first gallery showing of Urban Art. The display at Curtin UniversityÕs Erica Underwood Gallery, July 10 - 27 1990 showed the works of ten of the City of GosnellsÕ talented aerosol artists and was yet another development in the City of Gosnells unique Urban Arts programme that is being used as a model around Australia.
Community Arts
Excuse me but we are still out here...
Billboard spaces is part of an on-going initiative from the Festival of Arts 1990 (Adelaide) hoping to expand the idea of suburban street activity.
Community Arts
Teenage Roadshows Journeys of Discovery
Looks at the work of Gil Weaver and the Teenage Roadshows and what started for one individual as a rescue mission for deprived urban kids in 1972 has become one of the few arts educational enterprises for people living in outback Australia. Great photos of the kids and their artworks.
Community Arts
Interview with Deborah Mills, director of the Community Development Cultural Unit
Interview with Deborah Mills, director of the Community Development Cultural Unit. ÒI cannot really predict where community arts is going to go... butÓ
Community Arts
Powerhouse Regional Arts Centre
At Casula railway station just outside Liverpool NSW stands an old but sturdy former power station which is steadily taking on its new life as a community arts centre. John SkennerÕs architectural plans have resulted from extensive community and council consultation.
Community Arts
State of the Arts in Community Arts - a special 16 page directory to national resources.
State of the Arts in Community Arts - a special 16 page directory to national resources. Comprehensive and clear listing of national organisations and agencies.
Community Arts
Legitimate at last
Humourous look at the legitimising of Ôcommunity artsÕ.
Community Arts
People and places
In Hastings Victoria, a performance artist and a conservationist worked with school children and the community to raise their consciousness of the necessity to protect the seagrass in the area against destruction from industrial development. Three years after the start of the Seagrass Project, the community voted into council a large contingent of environmentally conscious representatives.
Community Arts
Belles Lettres: Voices from Homes of Violence
Belles Lettres is a collection of writing and visual images by participants in a women's writing project held under the umbrella of Women's Refuge and the Incest Centre in the ACT (Australian Capital Territory).
Community Arts
The Arts Council at a Cultural Frontier
The environmental movement has given weight to a genuine desire for people to re-associate with the bush and discover values beyond the limitations of a suburban Brick Wall Dreaming.
Community Arts
Savage Lives
Savage Lives began in June 1989 when 3 artists Leigh Hobba, Ray Arnold and John Dale took up residence in a minerÕs house in Savage River, Tasmania.
Community Arts
Anita Aarons on Aesthetic Aerobics
Anita Aarons said this fell off the back of a bus while in Bali.
Community Arts
From a Cardboard Box to Knox
Community arts in Victoria in 1990. Looks at the Oakleigh Community railway project and details of Austin Hospital Textile mural. Great colour photos.
Community Arts
Community Arts Resource Centre
The Community Arts resource Centre is an information resource/referral centre with a specialised library collection.
Community Arts
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