Aboriginal Art Blog
ART ARK®
The 1967 referendum on Aboriginal rights in Australia was a significant milestone in the country's history, reflecting a national desire for change and recognition of the rights of Aboriginal people
What is the Voice to parliament? Australian referendum 2023
What is the Voice to Parliament?
The Voice is a proposed body designed to represent Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia. It would provide independent advice to the Parliament and Government, make proactive and responsive representations, and have its own resources for research and advocacy.
Members of the Voice would be chosen by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, serving for a fixed period of time to ensure accountability.
The Voice aims to be representative, inclusive, culturally informed, and gender balanced. It would be accountable, transparent, and subject to governance and reporting requirements.
The Voice would collaborate with existing organisations and traditional structures, but would not have a program delivery function or veto power.
Beware red flags and fakes: how to buy authentic First Nations designs that benefit creators and communities
From souvenir shops to art galleries, First Nations designs are big business. Australia’s Productivity Commission estimates about $250 million of Indigenous-style art and consumer products are sold annually. But just 16% of that ends up in the hands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists.
What do white staff do in remote Indigenous art centres?
50 years of arts centres
Remote art centres are central to today’s internationally successful Indigenous contemporary art industry. They typically have a white art centre manager and other staff overseen by an Indigenous board....
Sailing vessels in Arnhem Land rock art
The rock art of northwestern Arnhem Land is world-renowned and represents one of the world’s most enduring artistic cultures.
Rock art is a continuing tradition. It includes images of “outsiders”: people and objects brought to Australian shores by Macassans from southeast Asia and, later, by Europeans.
Oldest Aboriginal rock painting.
This 17,500-year-old kangaroo in the Kimberley is Australia’s oldest Aboriginal rock painting
Aboriginal Art, Art Centres, and Covid-19
In troubling and uncertain times like these, we find more meaning than ever in our mission at ART ARK®, which is to create economic opportunities for, and support and celebrate Aboriginal people through art.
Indigenous art centres that sustain remote communities are at risk. VET can help.
Indigenous art provides important economic benefits. When the art market peaked in 2007, Indigenous art was estimated to generate some A$400-500 million a year. This supported 110 Indigenous art centres and about 5,000 art workers (artists).
How Indigenous fashion designers are taking control and challenging the notion of the heroic, lone genius
Indigenous Australians have influenced modern Australian dress since first contact. From possum skin cloaks and booka kangaroo capes to shell necklaces in Tasmania, Europeans have been fascinated with Indigenous materials, skills and aesthetics. They have stolen, purchased, borrowed and worn them for more than 200 years.
Aboriginal art: is it a white thing?
Richard Bell, Scientia E Metaphysica (Bell’s Theorem) 2003, Acrylic on canvas, 240 x 540cm. Milani Gallery.
In 2002 Bell decried how the white-controlled Aboriginal art industry privileged art from remote areas as more “authentic” than that from urban areas. Vernon Ah Kee, another successful artist in Milani’s gallery, agrees: urban Aborigines “are as much Aboriginal as anybody else” and, adds Bell, “we paid the biggest price” for colonisation.