WHAT WE DO

Our commitment is to provide individuals across the Indigenous arts in our communities to build strong, ethical Indigenous arts and provide a commercial outlet without exploitation of artists and negatively affect their families and communities.

 
  1. Music
    Indigenous musicians generally write about subjects important to their communities, land, community issues and often protest songs. We provide studio, production and exposure to Indigenous and non-Indigenous musicians from all genre, assisting in composition, discussion and production.
  2. Painting
    Dot paintings have now been widely accepted and Internationally recognised as unique and integral to Australian Aboriginal Art. The simple dot style as well as cross hatching, may be mesmerising and beautifully aesthetic to the eye, but compose a stronger hidden meaning and deeper purpose, disguising the sacred meanings behind the stories in the painting.
  3. Instruments
    We represent and support a range of tradition carvers of musical instruments and weaponry, from didgeridoos and clap sticks to all significant cultural tools and art works. In construction of their instruments, Aboriginal Australians use the resources at hand and most of their instruments consist of two separate parts, though many instruments provide an outstanding exhibition of musical ingenuity.
  4. Story
    Dreamtime stories are an Indigenous form of the spiritual Dreaming and more than myths, legends and fables and quaint tales. They are definitely not quaint tales created to amuse children. Dreamtime stories are the oral textbooks of the Australian Indigenous culture, to accumulate and pass on knowledge, spirituality, and wisdom, from when time began. The storyteller is a custodial role and that of cultural educator.
  5. Weaving
    Thousands of years and many generations of Aboriginal people have made woven crafts and arts with no distinction between art and craft. Art remains a way of life, as functional as it is about beautiful. Artistic forms continue to be used by Aboriginal people to pass on skills, knowledge and practical tools, needed to thrive and manage the continent of Australia.
  6. Carvings
    Totems and other carvings are often made in honour of a person who has passed away and are personal to either an individual or a clan. Many show in depth detail of totemism categories including individual, sex, moiety, section and sub-section, clan, local, conception, birth, dream and multiple totemism. Individuals and clans relate to several totems, each depicting different animals, flora, fauna and patterning.