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HELEN COLE VISITS A PAPER UNIVERSE

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“Artists’ books break all the rules. They stretch, fold, sculpt and reimagine the book as an object — not just something to read, but something to experience”

Curator Maria Savvidis.

 

Two views of the ‘Paper Universe: The Book as Art’ entry concertina    PHOTOs: Helen Cole

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PAPER UNIVERSE: THE BOOK AS ART

A MAJOR EXHIBITION OF ARTISTS BOOKS AT THE STATE LIBRARY OF NSW

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The exhibition press release states, ‘Paper Universe: The book as art’ showcases almost 100 rarely seen works from the State Library’s extraordinary collection of artists’ books. Featuring striking and innovative creations, the exhibition reveals how artists transform the idea of a book into works of art. According to State Librarian Dr Caroline Butler-Bowdon: “Paper Universe offers a rare chance to experience some of the most inventive, thought-provoking and surprising works in the Library’s collection – many by some of Australia’s most celebrated artists – all in the one place.”

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Paper Universe: The book as art is a free exhibition at the State Library of NSW until 3 May 2026

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Visiting ‘PAPER UNIVERSE’ with Helen Cole+Victoria+Doug

Towards the end of 2025 we were drawn to Sydney to encounter the seminal artists book exhibition PAPER UNIVERSE: The Book as Art. We invited our friend Helen Cole to join us and Helen was able to arrange a meeting with the curator Maria Savvides to discuss the exhibition, the books and their presentation.

After our viewing of the exhibition our reflective discussion about what we had encountered led to an invitation for Helen to write an informed essay from her significant experience and knowledge of the artists book.

What follows after a selection of images, mainly taken by Helen, is her essay and a collection of documents and a video of the exhibition.

 

Paper Universe: The Book as Art  – curator Maria Savvidis with Helen Cole  PHOTO: Doug Spowart

 


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HERE’S A SELECTION OF BOOKS FROM THE EXHIBITION

“Click” on the image to enlarge and see the caption.

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HELEN COLE’S REFLECTIONS ON THE SHOW

 

When I curated the artists’ books exhibition Freestyle Books from State Library of Queensland’s artists’ books collection in 2008 it was supposed to be a mere taster before a major exhibition of the artform. That never happened. It was very gratifying to find out that State Library of New South Wales has taken up the challenge of both curation and display of this form that can be difficult to exhibit, and given it the title of Paper Universe: The book as art. The curator, librarian Maria Savvidis and her supporting team of librarians, conservators and designers have done a superb job in showcasing the richness of stories and artworks that artists books yield. They were fortunate to have five years to bring the exhibition to fruition, and this is shown by the attention to detail in its staging.

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The exhibition is introduced in the wide corridor leading to it by a huge concertina ‘book’ with blown-up details of three distinctive works. Before you enter, the view of the concertina is a quiet white book by Nicole Hayes with a delicate texture pierced through the page from front and back with pins. As you leave the view is of colourful, forceful black, red and blue designs in linocut and digital prints from books by Dianne Fogwell and Lyn Ashby, summing up the other extreme of the books you have seen.

 

Paper Universe exhibition   PHOTO: Doug Spowart

That calm entry leads into a quiet space to engage with the works in the exhibition, provided by dividers reminiscent of Japanese shoji screens. The themes around which the exhibition is woven are well chosen and enunciated in the didactics: the art of inspiration – influences and sources in other artists work; the natural world – its beauty, its power, but also its fragility; the civil condition – investigating, reflecting and challenging social issues, politics, morality and equality; unveiling identity – the shaping of personal, family, and national identities and memories; the artist’s eye –  investigations into the notion of the book. Each is signified by a different colour in the surrounding exhibition architecture – walls, plinths and borders on the screens

The books are very well displayed, individually, with several strategies used to overcome the perennial problem of exhibiting artists books, that they generally cannot be fully experienced when closed or open at only one page. The most common comment about an artists’ book exhibition is “I wish I could see the whole book” and indeed it is my thought too, even knowing how difficult it is to avoid. The curator has gone to great lengths to show as many books in their entirety as possible.

 

Caren Florance WYSIWYG, 2013

The first book in the exhibition, or is it the last? WYSIWYG (What you see is what you get) (2013) by Caren Florance, the curator’s own copy, was designed to be seen as a whole when the book is closed, displaying what a rarity that is. The text lines are printed on increasingly larger pages, each peeking out from the one above. Maria Savvidis wrote: “This book served as both a talisman and inside joke for me as the curator of this exhibition, years spent thinking about the paradox of exhibiting artist’s books…WYSIWYG is a wry but generous show of empathy from the artist who understands this difficulty and has shown mercy on collecting institutions tasked with the impossible.” Anne-Marie Hunter created the Tower of Babel (2006), (The Tower of Babel, Artists’ Book By Anne-Maree Hunter | State Library of Queensland) a book in the round which was exhibited in my 2008 exhibition, with the same intent.

 

Garry Shead Ern Malley: The Darkening Ecliptic, 2003

Several of the works have been removed from their covers and are displayed, page by page, on the wall.  These include Garry Shead’s Ern Malley: The darkening ecliptic (2003): a sequence of etchings, which when presented together create a single image. Along with the display of the ceramic box in which it was presented, this is possibly the best way to show this work.

 

G.W. Bot Requiem by Anna Akhmatova, 2020

The pages of G.W. Bot’s superb linocuts for Requiem by Anna Ahkmatova (2020) are beautifully arranged framed on a blue background, however not all pages of the book are included so it is unfortunately a circumscribed view of the production.

Other works displayed page by page include Paul Uhlmann’s New Insecta, Queensland: AA Girault (1989), Judy Watson’s A preponderance of Aboriginal blood (2005), Peter Lyssiotis and George Matoulis’ Bridge (2021) and Glenda Orr and Kathy Boyle’s Paradise Lost : an artists’ book exploring the status of threatened & iconic plants from Australia and New Zealand collected by Daniel Solander and Joseph Banks during Captain Cook’s 1770 voyage (2020).

 

Dianne Fogwell Ashes to Ashes – Dust to Dust- Ash Wednesday 16th February 1983, (2018)  PHOTO: Doug Spowart

The pages of Di Fogwell’s Ashes to ashes – dust to dust: Ash Wednesday 16th February 1983 (2018) are arranged upright to evoke the flames of the bushfire it describes. There has been some comment that this destroys the original form and order of the books, but I disagree. Some books are meant to be rearranged by the reader or at least read in any order they want. Also, the curator went to some lengths to speak to the artists and present their work as they would want. For most of the works artists’ statements are provided, along with translations of foreign language texts, where appropriate.

I don’t consider print portfolios on a single subject, often by printmaking groups, constitute successful and cohesive artists books, and there are a few in this show including Natural Collection (2017) by the Warringah Printmakers Studio. It was published to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Studio and is based on the species and ecological communities of the Northern Beaches of Sydney that are under threat. Ten of the 29 prints that comprise the work are exhibited over three changeovers, not including the texts which accompany each print. I don’t think this work has a conceptual framework – a common subject, yes, but not enough to tie them together – as a book.

 

Mike Hudson & Jadwiga Jarvis Ockers: A poem by Pi O 1999

Concertina books are perfectly made for display, extended either framed on a wall or standing upright on a plinth. The bold and colourful Wayzgoose Press book Ockers: a poem by Pi O (1999) is displayed partly opened behind glass. A thoughtful work previously unknown to me was Theo Strasser’s In ecstasy, Franz Kafka (2013) in acrylic painting and collage, based on an aphorism by Kafka. Another is Lossed (2022) by Sara Bowen.  Reduction lino prints of her parents, at first strong, becoming lighter as the book is opened page by page. I’m not sure if it represents her memory of them fading or their memories of each other fading through dementia, but it is a very touching work which is displayed to perfection.

 

Katharine Nix The Uluru Book, 1994

Several works which could be regarded as book objects were included. The Uluru Book (1994) by Katharine Nix has an imposing physical presence; multiple layers of the hand-made paper for which she is well known, with ochre coloured covers tied with rusted wire and pierced by bones. All elements allude to the close links between the rock and its original inhabitants, and the damage done to the rock and its surrounding environment by the thousands of visitors. Teledex (1981), by Ted Hopkins is a container for poems in the form of an old-fashioned metal teledex, indexed with tabs.

 

Nathalie Gautier-Hartog
Looking for Paradise, 2020 + Video a collaboration with Broken Yellow

Looking for paradise (2020) by Nathalie Gautier-Hartog, is about refugees seeking a home in Australia, but subject to Australian government policies. It is presented as 12 books inside a wire cage, further emphasizing the restrictions placed on refugees. It is noted that all of the books are available to view as PDFs on the artist’s website with a QR code linking to it displayed. There is also a clever animation based on the United Nation’s Human Rights Charter with images from the books showing in the gallery. It is also on her website. It was created in collaboration with Broken Yellow Studio and the Asylum Seekers Centre. I’m not a great fan of digitised artists books but must admit this combination of media enhances interaction and appreciation of the work.

 

Penny Evans Proof, 2015

Relatively few First Nations artists create artists books, so it was great to see a works by Judy Watson and a work by Penny Evans, who has Gamilaroi, Welsh, Irish and German heritage using the form to examine connections between culture and country in her unique state book Proof (2015). Using collage and digital prints with stitching it was accompanied by a page-by-page video of the work.

 

Geraldine Rede & Violet Teague Night Fall in the Ti-Tree, 1905  PHOTO: Doug Spowart

I was surprised that no works from the origins of artists books were shown: books such as those by Picasso and Bonnard published by Ambroise Vollard and Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler in Paris in the early twentieth century. It could be because the library doesn’t hold them. A quick search of the SLNSW catalogue revealed Dingo, with drypoint etchings by Pierre Bonnard published by Vollard in 1924, but few others. I was pleased to see the inclusion of Night fall in the ti-tree (1905) by Violet Teague and Geraldine Rede with its delicate woodcuts, and its acknowledgement as the first Australian artists’ book.

 

Ed Rusha Every Building on the Sunset Strip, 1966 + Philip Quirk Oxford Street Profile, 2011   PHOTO: Doug Spowart

In a small way the exhibition demonstrates the limitations of the artists’ book collection at the SLNSW, which has not concentrated on its development until relatively recently. Most of the exhibited works have been created in the twenty-first century. There are few books published overseas, one being the fabulous version of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (1973) by the British artist Susan Allix. The Rubaiyat is a very popular subject for interpretation by artists. An important artist in the history of the artist’s book is American Edward Ruscha, an early exponent of the democratic multiple. He is represented by the concertina photobook Every building on the sunset strip (1966) which has had a huge influence on other artists who continue to create similar works. In this exhibition the book is unusually displayed fully extended to 7.5 metres and is shown with Oxford Street Profile (2011) documenting Oxford Street in Sydney by Australian photographer Philip Quirk. It only stretches to 7.33 metres. It was interesting to see Micky Allan’s early (in Australian terms) artist’s book My Trip (1976). Displayed open, a full facsimile of its newspaper format is also available for closer investigation.

Micky Allan My Trip, 1976

 

Dancing Over Dark Waters (2012), Howl for a Black Cockatoo (2015), and Phantomwise Flew the Black Cockatoo (2017), by Sue Anderson and Gwen Harrison, with Peter Lyssiotis writing the text for Dancing over dark waters, very impressive books all, are very similar materially and in subject. They could have been replaced by other works expanding the breadth of vision made available in the exhibition. Similarly, several artists are represented by more than one work when other artists and their ideas could have been embraced.

 

Deanna Hitti Towla, 2017

The exhibition includes some of my favourite artists books including Towla (2017) by Deanna Hitti, with the integral clamshell box creating a board for backgammon, the subject of the book. It is an intriguing book with instructions for backgammon phonetically translated using Arabic and Latin characters but with a twist. Arabic letters spell the instructions in English and Latin letters spell the instructions in Arabic. Some of the books in this exhibition have become my new favourites.

 

In Conclusion

Criticisms of some components of the exhibition are mere quibbles. In retrospect I could make many about my own exhibition in 2008. This is a fabulous exhibition, beautifully curated, wonderfully designed, and a rare opportunity for the public to experience the breadth and depth of the artists’ book. I hope it will introduce the magical world of artists’ books to a whole new audience in Sydney who will follow up with personal experiences with artists’ books in the library. I also hope that SLNSW will continue to support the art form in both acquisitions and exhibitions.

 

Helen Cole

March 14, 2026

 

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Judges: Helen Cole & Roger Butler with Clyde McGill    PHOTO: Artspace Mackay

HELEN COLE: Brief Biography

Helen Cole is intimately acquainted with the world of artists’ books, including their collection and the opportunities and difficulties in presenting these artworks in a public context. Helen was the Arts and Rare Book librarian at State Library of Queensland for thirty years. During much of that time she was responsible for the development of the Library’s extensive Artists’ Books Collection. She has been significantly involved in the artists’ book discipline writing articles and making presentations at conferences. She has judged the Manly Artists Book Prize once and on two occasions judged the Libris Australian Artists’ Book Prize for Artspace Mackay. In 2008 she curated the SLQ exhibition Freestyle Books: Artists’ books from the collection. Helen also co-curated the Tales from the Lyrebird with Ron McBurnie for Artspace Mackay. Apart from her work developing public collections she has amassed a personal library of cherished books.

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OTHER PAPER UNIVERSE RESOURCES

 

 

 

 

DOWNLOAD: A list of all books in Paper Universe:  Paper Universe Book List

 

DOWNLOAD: A catalogue of Didactic Information on Each Book: Paper Universe Exhibition Captions

 

DOWNLOAD: A Press Release of the exhibition: Paper Universe Media Release

 

 

 

We wish to acknowledge the courtesy extended to us by curator Maria Savvidis.

 

The Reflection text ©2026 Helen Cole
All photographs are by Helen Cole unless otherwise credited.
© is retained by all authors

 

All photographs have been digitally optimised by Doug Spowart.

 

 

Two views of th ‘Paper Universe’ entry concertina PHOTO: Helen Cole

 

 

 

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2025 MULLINS CONCEPTUAL PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE

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2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Priz

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2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize

Muswellbrook Regional Art Centre   14 August – 11 October 2025

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The Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize seeks artist entities that challenge the viewer via the illustration of a concept rather than being merely illustrative or representational.

The work must be primarily photographic but not to the exclusion of mixed media and three dimensional objects.

The Australian Photographic Society’s Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is a national $30,000 acquisitive prize that seeks to find Australia’s best conceptual photographic works. Finalists of the prize are exhibited annually at Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre with the prize-winning work joining the Muswellbrook Shire Art Collection, and a collection of contemporary photographic works acquired through the Muswellbrook Photographic Award (1987 – 2014). Means of work presentation are unrestricted, inviting photographers to illustrate the intent of their works through a myriad of mediums.

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Antares Wells Assistant Curator MCA  PHOTO: liya Cohen Headshots

ABOUT THE ADJUDICATOR  (From the APS Instagram)

This year’s sole adjudicator is Antares Wells, Assistant Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. Antares is a curator and writer with a specialisation in photography. Previously, she was Curator at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, and Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

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THE 30 FINALISTS  (Selected from 366 entries)

Images supplied by the Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize. “Click” on the image to enlarge entry and to see maker and title.

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Antares Wells announces the Prize-cropped

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THE ADJUDICATOR’S ADDRESS AND PRIZE ANNOUNCEMENT

Good afternoon everyone, and thank you all for coming. It’s wonderful to see so many people here celebrating contemporary photography. My name is Antares Wells and I am Assistant Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. It’s an honour to have been invited by the Australian Photographic Society to judge the 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize and I am thrilled to be here with you today. I’d like to acknowledge the Wonnarua people as the traditional custodians of the lands on which we are gathering tonight and I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging.

This year’s Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize received hundreds of entries from across the country and I am delighted to have selected 30 finalists for this exhibition. The work presented here spans the breadth of contemporary photographic practice in Australia.

Artists Justine Roche, Nicholas Hubicki, Claire Paul and Isabella Capezio engage thoughtfully with the natural environment and its relationship to photography, presenting work that reflects a deep consideration of materials. Works by Carolyn Craig, Shea Kirk and David Rosetzky critically consider the body, desire and the self. Artists Mungo Howard, Angus Brown, Lisa Stonham and Annabelle McEwen mine the relationships between photography and other media, such as painting and sculpture, encouraging us to think critically about what a photograph is.

Works by Skye Wagner, Claudia Nicholson, Darron Davies and Callan Skimin reframe existing found and archival imagery, creating new image worlds in the process that harness the photograph’s associative power. Artists Jeremy Drape, Jessie Turner and Julie Purdie experiment with perception and the capacity of the lens to frame a world.

Works by Dylan Marriott, George Angelovski, Kathy Mackey, and Tamara Voninski experiment with colour and form, while artists Izabela Pluta and Yvette Hamilton consider sites of photographic history and practice through formally ambitious works. Finally, Miho Watanabe, Hilary Wardhaugh, Ali Tahayori, Lilah Benetti, and Minami Ivory explore memory, trauma, loss, and possible futures, in quietly affecting and powerful ways.

For those of you drawn to processes of technical experimentation, you are in for a treat. We have artists who are working in new ways with historical processes, such as salt prints, wet collodion and opalotypes; we have artists inventing new processes, such as ‘chemography’; and we have artists working critically with new technologies such as 3D printing, moulding, and Artificial Intelligence.

As you can imagine, with this group of finalists it was incredibly difficult to identify a winner, and I thank Elissa, Brian and Roger for their patience over the past 48 hours!

Johanna Ng – a woman wearing a choker is walking in a crowd, 2024

I am delighted to announce that the winner of the 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is Johanna Ng, for her work a woman wearing a choker is walking in a crowd (2024). Drawn from her broader body of work every asian in sex and the city, Johanna’s work utilises screenshots of Asian extras in the TV show, often glimpsed in the background. Johanna writes in her statement: I “photographed the extras in new compositions” and then “fed these compositions through Google’s image-to-text and then text-to-image AI engines. Ultimately, an image of an Asian woman becomes ‘a woman’ and the text ‘a woman’ conjures the image of a white one.”

Johanna’s work is visually compelling and turns on its ability to make you stop, look, and then look again. There’s a dimensionality to it best experienced in person, which gives form to questions of visibility, erasure, and the biases structuring the image and text generation systems that are increasingly shaping how we see, think and behave. Congratulations, Johanna!

I am also pleased to award two works as Highly Commended:

Mungo Howard – Studio Window, 2025

Congratulations to Mungo Howard for his work Studio Window (2025), a beautiful work hovering somewhere between painting, sculpture and photography, turning on the power of introspection.

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Miho Watanabe – Awareness of Between-ness A Day After My Father’s Departure – Self-Portrait in His Room on His Chair, 2025

Congratulations to Miho Watanabe for his work Awareness of Betweenness: A Day after My Father’s Departure – Self-Portrait in His Room on His Chair (2025), a quietly affecting meditation on memory, grief and the passage of time.

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Congratulations to all of the finalists, and thank you again to Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre and the Australian Photographic Society for having me as this year’s judge.

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The Adjudicator Antares Wells with the winning entry

The Adjudicator Antares Wells with the winning entry

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SOME DOCUMENTATION OF THE EXHIBITION OPENING EVENT

“Click” on the image to enlarge and see the caption.

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SPONSORS OF THE MCPP

The 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is made possible by the Australian Photographic Society in partnership with the Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre, and with the support of Bengalla Mining Company, MACH Energy, Malabar Coal, AGL Hunter, and Australian Photography Magazine.

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SEE OUR BLOG POST FOR THE

2023 MULLINS CONCEPTUAL PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE

“Click” the link HERE

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POSTSCRIPT: THE WINNER JOHANNA NG VISITS EXHIBITION

Johanna Ng+Roger Skinner with Max Watters’ statue PHOTO: Andrew

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Mullins poster

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Adjudicator’s address ©Antares Wells
All photographs of the MCPP exhibition at the Muswellbrook Regional Art Centre are ©Doug Spowart

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2025 LIBRIS AWARDS Highly Commended to Cooper+Spowart book

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LIBRIS Website logo and image

LIBRIS Website logo and image

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2025 LIBRIS AWARDS: THE AUSTRALIAN ARTISTS’ BOOK PRIZE

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Held biennially by Artspace Mackay the Libris Awards brings together artist book works by leading and emerging makers from across Australia. The awards celebrate the artform by providing a snapshot of the discipline at a particular time and place. Of the hundreds of submissions received this year 60 finalists were selected to compete for three award categories:

CATEGORY 1  –  Daly Bay National Artists Book Award (acquisitive)
…………………–  Daly Bay National Artists Book Award, Highly Commended (acquisitive)

CATEGORY 2 – Cathy Knezevic Regional Artists Book Award (acquisitive)

CATEGORY 3 – Tertiary Artists Book Prize – an invitational award (acquisitive)

Award winning artists books are acquisitive and each Awards event build on the gallery’s nationally significant artist book collection.

ABOUT THE JUDGES (From the Awards website)

The 2025 Guest Judges were MARIAN MACKEN is a writer, researcher, educator, and artist trained in architecture, landscape architecture and visual art, and is currently Associate Professor at Te Pare School of Architecture and Planning, Waipapa Taumata Rau University of Auckland, New Zealand.

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ANA ESTRADA is a Brisbane-based socially engaged artist working in healthcare, exploring how art can be used to create safe spaces for dialogue. Her practice involves storytelling, photography, poetry, bookmaking, and, more recently, performance, all of which serve as crucial tools for voicing the experiences of aged care workers and residents.

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BEING PRESENT Image, Folders and clamshell

BEING PRESENT: Eight Acts  – Image, Folders and clamshell

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The Cooper+Spowart entry in this year’s Awards was our book Being Present: Eight Acts which was recently presented in a framed format in the Wangaratta Performing Arts Gallery.

Our artist’s statement was:

Walking is integral to our creative practice and being present in everyday life. These journeys, both physical and psychological, are not driven by the necessity to arrive at a determined end point but to meander and be aware of the possibilities in each step. Walking and Being Present also refers to the concept creation in, and performative actions of material thinking in the making of our book works.

Through a combination of materials and book forms, ‘Being Present: Eight Acts’ invites the reader to enter each scene and join us on a slow walk through time, space and considerations of ‘being in the world’.

We were excited to be advised that the book was judged as ‘Highly Commended’ by the judges and acquired for the Artspace Mackay Collection. While unable to attend the Award presentation event we forwarded the following words that were read by Gallery Director Tracey Heathwood.

We are deeply honoured to receive the Daly Bay Highly Commended Award in this prestigious exhibition and award. The Libris Awards is an important event to the artist book community, and we are thrilled with the knowledge that our book will now be included in the highly acclaimed Artspace Mackay artists book collection.

‘Being Present: Eight Acts’ evolved over many months of deep questioning and material thinking. The concept of walking and performance through both the physical and psychological space of the book is deeply embedded in both the making and reading of this book. It is an invitation the reader to enter each scene and join us on a slow walk-through time, space and an awareness of being in the world.

We wish to thank the sponsors Daly Bay for their support and the continued commitment that Artspace Mackay makes to the artists book community. We also wish to thank the Judges who we have taken care and time to connect with all the amazing books that have been presented to them for this award.

Thank you

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THE 2025 AWARD WINNERS

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CATEGORY 1

WINNER Daly Bay National Artists Book Award (acquisitive)

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Jude Taggart Roberts Less than 2 degrees 2025

Jude Taggart Roberts Less than 2 degrees 2025

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Jude TAGGART ROBERTS Less than 2 degrees  2025

Drawing, relief print on Hosho with paperclay, 160.0 x 46.0 x 4.0cm (open).

Images courtesy of the artist and Artspace Mackay

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HIGHLY COMMENDED Daly Bay National Artists Book Award  (acquisitive)

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COOPER+SPOWART Being Present - Eight Acts 2024

COOPER+SPOWART Being Present – Eight Acts 2024

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Victoria COOPER and Doug SPOWART  Being Present: Eight Acts  2024

Pigmented inks on photographic and art papers, edition of 3 + 1 AP, 31.0 x 22.0 x 3.5 cm

Images courtesy of the artists and Artspace Mackay

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CATEGORY 2

Cathy Knezevic Regional Artists Book Award (acquisitive)

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Karen Hurford & Natalie Field The Little Bird Compendium 2025,

Karen Hurford & Natalie Field The Little Bird Compendium 2025

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Karen HURFORD and Natalie FIELD  The Little Bird Compendium 2025

Mixed media, 19 x 27.0 x 13.0 cm. Images courtesy of the artists and Artspace Mackay

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CATEGORY 3

Tertiary Artists Book Prize – An invitational award (acquisitive)

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Megan Kennedy Hold Hands Spring Tide 2025

Megan Kennedy Hold Hands Spring Tide 2025

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Megan KENNEDY  Hold Hands Spring Tide  2025

Mixed media, 20.0 x 22.0 x 4.0 cm (closed), 20.0 x 44.5 cm dimensions variable (open).

Images courtesy of the artist and Artspace Mackay

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The 2025 Libris Award: The Australian Artists’ Book Prize exhibition will be on display at Artspace Mackay until the 14th of September.

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LIBRIS Website logo and image

LIBRIS Website logo and image

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WOTWEDID Blog page

WOTWEDID Blog page

READ MORE ABOUT OUR BEING PRESENT BOOK AND EXHIBITION: BEING PRESENT WOTWEDID BLOG POST 2024

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Libris Finalists Catalogue cover

DOWNLOAD AN ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE HERE: 2025 Libris Finalists Catalogue

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Artspace Mackay website

Artspace Mackay website

FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE AWARD:  THE LIBRIS WEBSITE

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WATCH THIS SPACE …

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COOPER+SPOWART “BEING PRESENT” and Perform Eight Acts

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Wangaratta Art Gallery Webpage

Wangaratta Art Gallery Webpage

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THE STORY ABOUT THE WORK

A long-term underlying driver of our creative practice both individual and collaborative is linked to a philosophy of Being Present. Our work responds to a variety of conditions and influences including historical that relate to the contemporary experience of a place, space and time.

This bookwork and exhibition is the culmination of work started in December last year when we were offered a show by the Wangaratta Art Gallery Director Rachel Arndt in the Wangaratta Performing Arts Centre (WPAC). Very early in the project, Arndt selected the image of Doug walking along the Wooli Wooli River to be the featured image. This image holds a lot of meaning for us as it is emblematic of our long journey along many paths following new directions in our creative and personal life.

In the WPAC space we could only present framed work as a requirement for the organisation due to the complexity of presenting off the wall art in that public space. As our medium is artists books and photobooks with wall art to support the concept, we were then confronted with the dilemma of how to present an exhibition that was potentially an artists book. We forged ahead, confident that this would be resolved as we materially worked through the project.

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Ovens River Wangaratta

Ovens River Wangaratta

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Following on from recent work in the nearby Winton Wetlands (Mokoan) and our Desire Paths series of books, we began the project by exploring tracks within the local place of Wangaratta, the Ovens River and the Warby Ranges.

During this time we also returned to the place of the Wooli River walk in northern NSW where we further developed the conceptual and creative work.

At this time we identified and drew upon a connection to the exhibition space as a site that related to our practice that involves self-documentation as a performative exploration of each concept.

The book was now taking shape as a series of Eight Acts that brought together our physical and psychological documentation together with the concepts of performance. As Arndt highlights in the exhibition didactic our work is:

… not driven by the necessity to ‘arrive’ at a determined end point, but instead guided by a shared philosophy of ‘being present’ – to meander and be aware of the possibilities in each step. Attuned to the sounds of birds, the texture or shape of a tree, an abstract form or shadow, or a poetic thought, they will stop and take time to observe and document these moments, each pause a metaphorical and visual conversation between time, place and being-in-the-world.

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Being Present: 8 Acts installation

Being Present: 8 Acts installation

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Presented as a series of eight ‘Acts’, Cooper and Spowart’s new body of work explores the psychological and corporeal insights of their walking practice. Their performative actions are captured through the making and reading of a book, with each framed work presenting one page turned and exposed, while another is hidden below. Just as one leg steps forward, the other remains behind in shadow. The ground, or their mise-en-scene, bringing situational significance.

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Angophora Grove Walk parts 1–4

4 images of Angophora Grove Walk showing different aspects of the book

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We designed the book so that each ‘Act’ offers an engaging haptic reading experience through unfolding the pages. In the exhibition space we were unable to show the book, therefore to give viewers an opportunity to see it in its entirety we made videos performing each ‘Act’ folio. Visitors to the exhibition can access these high definition videos via QR codes on the didactic panel next to each frame. We will also be presenting the book at specified times during the exhibition’s 3 month duration.

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Being Present: Eight Acts book and clamshell

Being Present: Eight Acts book and clamshell

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HERE ARE THE EIGHT ACTS

ACT ONE – The fourth path

ACT 1 - The fourth path – Wooli Wooli River

ACT 1 – The fourth path – Wooli Wooli River

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT TWO – Angophora Grove Walk

ACT 2 Angophora Grove Walk – Yuraygir National Park

ACT 2 Angophora Grove Walk, Yuraygir National Park

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT THREE – Walking the Fenceline

ACT 3 Walking the fenceline – Sunrise Track, Warby Ranges

ACT 3 Walking the fenceline – Sunrise Track, Warby Ranges

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT FOUR – Walking Through the Thickness …

ACT 4 Walking through the thickness of sound – Ovens River, Wangaratta

ACT 4 Walking through the thickness of sound – Ovens River, Wangaratta

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT FIVE – In the Presence of a Tree

ACT 5 In the presence of a tree – Lake Catani, Mount Buffalo National Park

ACT 5 In the presence of a tree – Lake Catani, Mount Buffalo National Park

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT SIX – The Meeting Circle

ACT 6 The meeting circle – Ovens River, Wangaratta

ACT 6 The meeting circle – Ovens River, Wangaratta

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT SEVEN – Portal, The Great South-West Walk

ACT 7 Portal – The Great South-West Walk, Glenelg River

ACT 7 Portal – The Great South-West Walk, Glenelg River

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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ACT EIGHT – Taking Flight, Boroka Lookout

ACT 8 Taking flight – Boroka Lookout, Gariwerd National Park

ACT 8 Taking flight – Boroka Lookout, Gariwerd National Park

TO VIEW A VIDEO PERFORMANCE of this ACT “Click”  HERE

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THE ARTISTS’  EPILOGUE TO THE BEING PRESENT BOOK

Throughout the development of this project, we have been informed by, and acted on, insights arising from both the physical: walking and corporeal contemplation; and the psychological: metaphorical and poetic connections with our surroundings.

Being Present is a philosophy that resonates throughout our creative careers and everyday life – underpinning our past, and as we navigate new paths.

The performance and creation of the eight ACTS has set the stage for future visual books to share, through the haptics of reading and visual metaphors, a deep connection with narratives of place.

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THE MAKING OF THE BOOK

This body of work was first exhibited as a book in frames  in Wangaratta Art Gallery’s exhibition space at the Performing Arts Centre in August to December 2024.

The book was resolved, printed and bound in our Bridge Street Studio in Benalla.

Being Present: Eight Acts is printed on an Epson printer with pigment inks on Epson Velvet Fine Art Paper and Zerkall printmaking papers and bound in Stonehenge covers, with Kozo Kawairi interleaved papers and waxed linen thread.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We wish to thank Rachel Arndt, Director of the Wangaratta Art Gallery for the opportunity for us to conceptualise, develop and create a new body of work that relates to the continuing theme in our work – Being Present.

We wish to thank Dr Felicity Rea for the access given to her family retreat at Wooli where we worked on this project. We also wish to acknowledge her continuing commentary and support of our work.

Thanks also to Cassandra Pollack for her knowledge and companionship along the Ovens River walk.

Thanks to Remy at She’s Arty in Benalla for the framing of the exhibition.

We also acknowledge the First Nations as the traditional custodians of the Country on which we have travelled through and worked. We respect their deep and enduring connection to their lands and waterways and recognise that sovereignty was never ceded.

We honour and respect their ancestors, Elders past, present and emerging and the continuation of cultural, spiritual and educational practices of all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

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Victoria Cooper + Doug Spowart

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WATCH THIS SPACE …

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VISITING GRAFTON REGIONAL GALLERY: June 2024

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GRG-WEB PAGE

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Regional Art Galleries exhibitions and events not only say a lot about the culture of a local community but they also provide a connection to the broader national and international world of art. These institutions are places where locals can engage with and present their stories and celebrate their creative spirits. This experience is not one that a capital city can provide – it is unique to the regional gallery and arts centre. It also provides an opportunity for local artists to be located or acknowledged within the broader art community. The Grafton Regional Gallery is one of these galleries.

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Gallery extnl_5030

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When visiting this region we always make time to see what is showing at the gallery and the current exhibitions were again full of interesting stories and creative work. The entrance to the front of the gallery and information centre is on the ground floor of historic Prentice House[1] . In these front rooms there is a wonderful show of botanical drawings and paintings by local artist, Doris O’Grady. O’Grady’s art can be appreciated for the aesthetics and taxonomic work she made from her collection during the mid 20th Century.

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Doris O'Grady "Mushrooms" exhibition

Doris O’Grady “Mushrooms” exhibition

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Interestingly the place where we are staying in this region had some strange fungi growing in the garden about which we were curious. Amongst Doris’ paintings was the very same fungus we had seen that morning in the front garden! O Grady’s work in emblematic of the blurred lines between art and science. Where the scientist or naturalist creates interpretive aesthetic drawings of their beloved subject for both further investigation and display.

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The Mush Room Family Play Space

The Mush Room Family Play Space with soft sculptures by Antony Perring, Design and education by Bush Fairy animations by Clara Lagor (USA) and Emma Scarth (Canada)

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Across the courtyard the newer second part of the gallery, we encountered a magical space inventively named, The Mush Room. Here artists and designers have playfully created a space of soft sculptures, a video and didactic wall panels. There is also an interactive drawing and sculpture for the young at heart to investigate fungi and environmental themes by creating their own work and adding leaf elements to adorn the wooden tree shapes.

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In the next gallery spaces, mushrooms and fungi feature again within a larger exhibition of prints and an artists book, The Printer’s Proof: The Fred Genis Collection. Genis over his long career as a master printmaker collaborated with many nationally and internationally renowned artists including John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, Tim Storrier, Judy Watson and Brett Whiteley.

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There is a huge diversity of themes and work, the Mushroom Book by John Cage is a main feature. Pages from the book are displayed between Perspex to allow the viewer to see both sides of the pages and connect with the books conceptual design incorporating lyrical texts and visual elements. The bound book was displayed in a vitrine adjacent with some archive documents of the production and sale.

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Artists Proof is a comprehensive exhibition bringing together a history of art and printmaking, the artists and studios. It is an exhibition that would appeal to many particularly those wanting to touch with the practice of Genis and his contemporary colleagues. There is the potential for many discussions around the individual works as objects and concepts, of and for their time in art.

We will return to the gallery as to fully engage with the depth of these exhibitions will take more than one visit.

Victoria Cooper

[1] For more history see https://galleryfriends.com.au

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Grafton Regional Gallery

June 2024

Exhibitions, 11 May to 7 July 2024

Doris O’Grady: Mushrooms

The Mush Room

The Printer’s Proof: The Fred Genis Collection

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All photographs by Doug Spowart    Text by Victoria Cooper

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MAGGIE HOLLINS: An artist in the Winton Wetlands

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Maggie Hollins in Winton Wetlands Photo: Doug Spowart

Maggie Hollins in Winton Wetlands Photo: Doug Spowart

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In my current practice I aim to observe, absorb, and have a conversation with, a place. I document the physical and intangible qualities of the landscape and use the materials I find at that place to honour its essence. I want to draw more attention to the need for a biotic interaction with our surroundings.

Since 2016 I have been inspired by the Winton Wetlands. I have documented the changing seasons and evidence of previous habitation at the Winton Wetlands with my photography. My engagement with the Winton Wetlands has led to the creation of woollen wall hangings and ephemeral artworks at the site. Found materials I have used in this exhibition will also become ephemeral works when I return them to the Winton Wetlands.

I have long been aware of the Winton Wetlands but it was not until 2016 that I engaged fully with the site. I visited the site often and became a Friend of the Winton Wetlands which allowed me to see some projects up-close being completed. I did some ephemeral works at the site and some felted works inspired by the wetlands. One felted work is included in this exhibition.

2022 saw my renewed interest in the site and together with colleagues, Doug Spowart and Victoria Cooper, we set out to discover the intricacies of site. This exhibition is the result of our collaboration.

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ABOUT MAGGIE HOLLINS’ WORKS

Maggie Hollins with Harmony

Maggie Hollins with “Harmony”  PHOTO: Doug Spowart

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Guided by the water, tree branches and barks, fallen feathers, leaves and grasses, I have participated in the narrative of the Winton Wetlands.

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Maggie Hollins' 'Recognition of the Past", "Shelter" &"The Dead Stags"

Maggie Hollins’ ‘Recognition of the Past”, “Shelter” &”The Dead Stags”

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These natural elements, coloured ghostly grey on my textiles are a spectral testimony to their origin. The found metal shards authored the presence of others’ existence and together with the natural elements these works were fused by the hot sun. My textile works aim to celebrate the resilience and vitality of the wetlands ecosystem while eliciting the many distant voices of this special place.

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Maggie Hollins "Drifting on a Current"

Maggie Hollins “Drifting on a Current” Photo: a collaboration

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Feathers drift and amass in favourite resting places in the wetlands. I have often watched in awe at the murmuration of birds in the wetlands. My kinetic work aims to evoke a floating pattern of flight.

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I have attempted to use my collage works as a metaphor for the layered past of the site to script stories of drought and flood, along with species that have occupied the wetlands.

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The simple woven works aim to invoke the symbiosis binding all existence. The found materials will become ephemeral works when I return them to the site.

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Maggie Hollins "Layers of the Wetlands"

Maggie Hollins “Layers of the Wetlands”

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Winton Wetlands Blue Wave

Winton Wetlands logo

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE WINTON WETLANDS VISIT:  https://wintonwetlands.org.au/

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The artists wish to acknowledge the Winton Wetlands team for their support.
We acknowledge the traditional lands of the Yorta Yorta people & their 8 clans the original owners of Country.
We respect their deep enduring connection to their lands and waterways and recognise that sovereignty was never ceded.
We honour and respect their ancestors, their Elders past, present and emerging.
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Most documentation photos and the video b Doug Spowart. The on-location photographs were a collaborative production by all 3 artists.

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