Museums and the Yolŋu Community
Manager of Indigenous Programs at the Australian National Maritime Museum
In the mid-twentieth century, the production and touring of bark paintings played a diplomatic role in embassies, galleries, and museums around the world. At a time when Indigenous Australians were not counted in the national census or considered citizens, these bark paintings acted as intermediaries and interlocutors for global audiences to ‘see’ and ‘read’ the mythologies and histories of Aboriginal people in ways that were far removed from their lived experiences and realities. Today, bark painting stands among the most unique forms of cultural expression, as a sustainable repository of knowledge preservation, and most importantly, as a dynamic mode of artistic expression that Yolŋu people have used to communicate their knowledge and culture to audiences both local and global.
This lecture reflects on two major curatorial projects at the new Chau Chak Wing Museum, University of Sydney, and Matt Poll's research into the remarkable legacy of Yirrkala bark paintings in national and international contexts.
The aim of the two ambitious exhibitions, ‘Gululu dhuwala djalkiri: welcome to the Yolŋu foundations’ and ‘Ambassadors’, is to celebrate the beauty and role of Yolŋu art as ongoing expressions and kinship, Country, and identity. As part of the curatorial process, Yolŋu Elders worked closely with the curatorial team to share their knowledge in guiding the development, design, and interpretation of their artworks. Situated amongst these artworks are striking examples of bark paintings that form the focus of Matt Poll's research and in particular, his interest in the Yirrkala bark paintings collected by Ronald and Catherine Berndt in 1946-47 and questions about the role bark painting in the global history of Indigenous art.
Please contact the museum for materials and resources related to this lecture
Matt Poll is the Manager of Indigenous Programs at the Australian National Maritime Museum, home to the internationally significant Saltwater bark paintings, profound statements of Yolŋu people’s inalienable rights to sea country.
Matt is also the Chairperson of Orana Arts in mid-western regional New South Wales, a member of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Advisory Board for Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collection Management Reference Group at Sydney’s Museum of Arts and Applied Sciences.
Matt was previously Curator of the Indigenous Heritage and Repatriation Project at the Chau Chak Wing Museum at the University of Sydney where he worked on two major exhibitions: ‘Gululu dhuwala djalkiri: welcome to the Yolŋu foundations’ and ‘Ambassadors’. He has also previously served as Artistic Director of Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Cooperative Gallery and was recipient of the Howard Mitchell Fellowship and Musée du Quai Branly Curatorial Residency in Paris.
Flinders University Museum of Art
Flinders University I Sturt Road I Bedford Park SA 5042
Located ground floor Social Sciences North building, Humanities Road adjacent carpark 5
Telephone | +61 (08) 8201 2695
Email | museum@flinders.edu.au
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