'Repatriate' Exhibition Brochure

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The constructed nature of history and of identification is arbitrary, not fixed, but open to new possibilities of meaning and identification. ” 1

Gordon Bennett 1996

Expression diverse in form, this ensemble of artists melds together stories from their homelands and clans to produce a powerful voice of cultural resilience.

Repatriate

Repatriate, as the name suggests, not only takes ownership of cultural practices pre-contact, but claims recent histories that have influenced

the issues, trauma and varying lifestyles of contemporary First Nations people - remote, regional and suburban. To navigate a foreign construct increasingly impeding on land, culture and people, Repatriate stands firm; looking back, being present and pushing forward through tradition, beauty, honesty, humour and grit.” Darren Blackman, exhibition curator

DYLAN MOONEY | DYLAN SARRA | DARREN BLACKMAN | DION BEASLEY | BERNARD SINGLETON JR. | KYRA MANCKTELOW

REPATRIATE 24 JUNE — 3 AUGUST 2022 Repatriate brings together four artists who met and study together at the Queensland College of Art’s (QCA) Contemporary Australian Indigenous Art (CAIA) program, Griffith University, Brisbane alongside collective members Dion Beasley and Cairns (Gimuy) based artist Bernard Singleton Jr. The title of the exhibition is usually associated with the return of objects or people, back to where they came from. An expanded definition includes to restore: to restore origins, allegiance, or citizenship2— adapted here as the duty and social responsibility to restore foundations. Specifically in this exhibition, a call to restore Australia’s true foundational historical accounts and memories. Curated together the artworks are simultaneously loud and deeply poetic, informing us in a clear voice how histories are recorded, often skewed, and owned. The artists generously give us understandings why there must be honest considerations and fluidity for growth to restore our nation’s genuine narrative.

the integrity of Eurocentric narratives that cling to “settlement,” and the purpose of that single ideology. Blackman’s research uncovers how former Federal Education and Youth Minister Alan Tudge in 2021 argued that the problem with the draft changes to the national history curriculum “it [the impact of colonisation] gave the impression nothing bad happened before 1788 and almost nothing good has happened since.” Tudge emphasised how the planned updates downplayed Australia’s Western heritage and how we need to recognise that “...our democracy is based on our Christian and western origin with a reference to the importance of the values of patriotism and freedom”. 3 Australia’s shared history is one true history and there is fundamental responsibility for truth telling and to right wrongs—including in our education system.

As we witness the successive failures of the 2007 Close the Gap campaign 14 years on, and an Aboriginal Deaths in Custody Darren Blackman’s (Gureng rate of 1 death every 14 days Gureng, Gangulu Nations), since the Royal Commission body of work speaks to the Inquiry released its findings in notion that there are two 1991, with resemblances of versions of the colonisation protest banners, Blackmans of Australia. In this process, complex text puzzles directly Blackman proclaims his clan’s address failings in the dominant sovereignty through questioning Eurocentric narrative.

N O R T H Repatriate, 2022, NorthSite Contemporary Arts, Cairns, 2022. Photo: Michael Marzik.

1 Gordon Bennett, “The Manifest Toe” in Ian McLean & Gordon Bennett, The Art of Gordon Bennett, Craftsman House, Australia, p 42 2 https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/repatriate 3 https://ministers.dese.gov.au/tudge/roaring-back-my-prioritiesschools-tudents-return-classrooms


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'Repatriate' Exhibition Brochure by NorthSite Contemporary Arts - Issuu