Exhibitions on Screen | that’s how everything happens really

Exhibitions on Screen | that’s how everything happens really

that’s how everything happens really is a video artwork designed for a large LED screen with audio capability, exploring the possibility of an unavoidable destruction in the creation of economic and social community, how this relates to the public created by...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Colours of Makuru

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Colours of Makuru

Makuru Slow TV: Celebrating the Season of Fertility in Perth’s Urban Heart.The Noongar season of Makuru, represented by the colour dark blue, symbolises the rain and chilly weather characteristic of this period. During Makuru, the South West experiences its coldest...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Tjarlirli and Kaltukatjara Art

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Tjarlirli and Kaltukatjara Art

Tjarlirli Art Centre represents artists from Tjukurla in the Ngannyatjarra lands of Western Australia, while Kaltukatjara Art Centre is based in Docker River, Northern Territory. Both art centres have strong ties to the Papunya Tula movement, as families relocated...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Artitja | Across the Water

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Artitja | Across the Water

“Across the Water” unites the vibrant and culturally rich artworks of Tiwi Islands artists from Munupi Arts with those from remote community Aboriginal art centres in the East Kimberley, including Kira Kiro Artists at Kalumburu, Waringarri Arts in Kununurra and...
GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Martumili Artists | Kujungka

GOOLOGOOLUP NAIDOC SCREENINGS | Martumili Artists | Kujungka

 Kujungka is the third exhibition following Mirrka (2023) and Waru (2022), which respectively celebrated many of the bushfoods that have sustained Martu people over thousands of years, and the importance of traditional fire uses.Kujungka speaks to a sense of...