Podcasts about Nukunu

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Best podcasts about Nukunu

Latest podcast episodes about Nukunu

Trauma Resonance Resilience
Season 4, Episode 5, Colby Pearce on attachment, relationships and the importance of identity

Trauma Resonance Resilience

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2023 40:30


In conversation with Lisa Cherry today is Colby Pearce who is a Clinical Psychologist who lives and works on Kaurna (pronounced “Garna”), Nurungga (pronounced as it reads), and Nukunu (pronounced “nookunoo”) country in the land known as Australia. Across the last twenty-eight years Colby has worked continuously with children and young people recovering from a tough start to life, and adults who interact with them in care and professional roles. He maintains three busy psychotherapy clinics, but also finds time to write and deliver programs intended to enhance awareness of the experience, needs, and therapeutic care of young people who have experienced complex childhood trauma, including in Ireland. Colby also works with teams that support kinship carers of Australian Aboriginal Children, the stabilisation of kinship care arrangements, and family reunification. Colby is looking to expand his work with individuals and teams working in the child welfare space, and write more!

HIV unmuted
The breaking science from IAS 2023

HIV unmuted

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2023 21:11 Transcription Available


In this episode of HIV unmuted, the award-winning IAS podcast, we take a deep dive into the breaking science being released at IAS 2023 and explain why these breakthroughs are so important for people living with and affected by HIV.   Set in Australia, a country that is closing in on the elimination of HIV transmission, the conference highlights the latest research, including more hope for an HIV cure, expanding prevention options and insights into mpox. Guests also give us insight into exciting studies on prevention strategies for cardiovascular disease and post-treatment control of HIV in children who are treated early on.   These studies move us in the right direction. Yet, as our last guest makes clear, scientific advances alone can only get us so far. We must address persisting inequalities that remain in the HIV response. And we must put people first.   Meet our guests: Gracia Violeta Ross Quiroga, Programme Executive at the World Council of Churches, describes the potential life-changing impact the cutting-edge research has on herself and other people living with HIV. She tells us what it was like to grow up in a conservative Bolivia in the early 2000s without access to life-saving HIV treatment. Sharon Lewin, IAS President, IAS 2023 International Co-Chair and Director of the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, helps us understand the scientific significance of the breaking science.   James Ward, a Pitjantjatjara and Nukunu man, who is also an infectious diseases epidemiologist and the Director of the Poche Centre for Indigenous Health at the University of Queensland, tells us why the latest science doesn't always reach vulnerable communities. 

Tales From The Midpack
Heysen End To End - Fastest Known Time

Tales From The Midpack

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 89:08


Marcus Staker, Rurik (Roo) Symon, Dan Camac, and Simon Duke set out to break the fastest known time for the 1,200km Heysen Trail. Come and join some of the boys and their crew chief Liz Woodgate recap this amazing feat, run in memory of their friend Randell Taylor. (Cover photograph by Calumn Hockey.) Stepping Stone Coaching Do you dream of becoming a runner, switching to trails, or going for a new distance you've never run before? I would love to help you achieve your goal. Get in touch with me at Stepping Stone Coaching where I'll help you take the next step in your running future. https://beck2225.wixsite.com/steppingstonecoach https://www.facebook.com/Stepping.Stone.Coach SHOW NOTES Heysen E2E traversed through: Adnyamathanha, Banggarla, Nukunu, Ngadjuri, Kaurna, Peramangk, and Ngarrindjeri country. Fundraising Page https://randells-record-breakers.raisely.com/ Randell's Record Breakers https://www.facebook.com/groups/randellsrecordbreakers Relive https://www.facebook.com/si.duke.9/videos/735417610847029 ABC Radio Feature https://www.abc.net.au/adelaide/programs/afternoons/heysen-trail-record/13981422 ABC Article https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-07-22/runners-set-new-record-on-heysen-trail-walking-path/101260782 9 News Feature https://www.facebook.com/9NewsAdelaide/videos/828510741860425 Electrolyte 0% Alcohol Beer https://www.craftzero.com.au/products/zero-pale-ale-375ml Tales From The Midpack www.facebook.com/FromTheMidPack

triple j Unearthed
Top 5 Songs Of The Week: July 8th

triple j Unearthed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 26:27


A pair of WA songwriters showcase the abundance of talent in their region with new songs, while a young First Nations artist weaves storytelling and electronica in both English and Nukunu tongues.

triple j Unearthed
Top 5 Songs Of The Week: July 8th

triple j Unearthed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 26:27


A pair of WA songwriters showcase the abundance of talent in their region with new songs, while a young First Nations artist weaves storytelling and electronica in both English and Nukunu tongues.

South Australian Country Hour
Nukunu elder reflects on Flinders Ranges land handback

South Australian Country Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 6:04


In August 2021, a non-Indigenous landholder freely gave back her 30-acre Flinders Ranges property to the Nukunu people.

Aboriginal Way radio
SA State Landscape Strategy

Aboriginal Way radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 28:57


Landscape SA has released its ten-year State Landscape Strategy.South Australia's landscape boards, peak bodies, local and state government agencies, and other landscape management stakeholders have worked together to develop the strategy.The document outlines seven priorities for the landscape boards and their communities to consider in their land management practices.Landscape stakeholder, Travis Thomas is the co-chair of the First Nations of South Australia Aboriginal Corporation and says the strategy recognises Aboriginal people's connection to Country.“We've been providing input into the inclusion of First Nations throughout all landscape policy, and there is a good section in there which emphasises having First Nations involved,” said Nukunu man Travis Thomas.First Nations SA is the peak body for Aboriginal groups across South Australia, acting as a united voice on cultural heritage.Aboriginal Way asked Mr Thomas to explain how each priority could be implemented using First Nations knowledge.

Real Drug Talk
We Can Do This - Innovation In Aboriginal Health To Treat Ice

Real Drug Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 41:56


“We would like to acknowledge that this conversation was recorded on the traditional lands of the Wurundjeri people and pay my respect to Elders both past, present and future.”Our guest Rachel Reilly lives and work on Kaurna Country, and pays her respects to Elders past, present and emerging.We would also like to acknowledge the cultural authority of my Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander colleagues who have led this project, and provided guidance and support for me throughout.The project team comprises a team of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal researchers with an extraordinary depth of knowledge. Their bios are on the NIMAC website below.Lastly, we acknowledge and thank the participants in the research, who by generously sharing their knowledge have enabled this project to exist.In this episode, we chat with Rachel Reilly who is a senior research fellow from the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute about her work in Aboriginal health and the development and research of an app to help Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with the harmful impacts of Ice use. Rachel & Jack are not Aboriginal and have sort the blessing to publish this conversation from Professor James Ward, who is a Pitjantjatjara and Nukunu man and lead researcher on this project. Professor James Ward is a Pitjantjatjara and Nukunu man, an infectious diseases epidemiologist and a national leader in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research. He is currently the Director of the Poche Centre for Indigenous Health at The University of Queensland.Holding various roles over the last 25 years in Aboriginal public health policy for both government and non-government organisations, in urban regional and remote communities he has built a national program of research in the epidemiology and prevention of infectious diseases, with a particular focus on STIs, HIV and viral hepatitis in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.Professor Ward has previously worked at the Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales, Baker IDI in Alice Springs and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute. He has served on numerous national and international committees including currently the Communicable Diseases Network of Australia, the Australian National Council on Alcohol and Drugs, the CDNA COVID-19 Working Group and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander COVID-19 Taskforce. He has over 120 publications and leads several large scale public health and infectious diseases studies.   Links to the project and other helpful information. Project website:www.wecandothis.com.au www.nimac.org.au https://www.facebook.com/1wecandothis For service providers interested in using the app with clients, and providing feedback to us: Contact me: rachel.reilly@sahrmi.com Social determinants: Broadly, social determinants are the circumstances in which people grow, live, work and age (WHO 2008). ... For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, the social determinants of health also include factors such as cultural identity, family, participation in cultural activities and access to traditional lands. I've attached a poster that summarises some of the findings from our conversations with people about their experiences with methamphetamine. A summary of intergenerational trauma narrated by Jack Charles is here:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-RaB19D13E The US research on Adverse Childhood Events is summarised here:https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/aces/index.htmlIt includes a neat little YouTube video on the site that gives a nice summary. Info sheet on trauma-informed services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (Judy Atkinson):https://earlytraumagrief.anu.edu.au/files/ctg-rs21.pdfhttps://aifs.gov.au/cfca/2013/08/13/growing-our-children-up-strong-and-deadly-healing-for-children-and-young-people-2 _________________________We have a new book! Grab the Special Offer here: https://www.connectionbasedliving.com/11STEPSBOOKIf you or a loved one needs help beating addiction, you can visit www.connectionbasedliving.com.au If you want to check out more about Real Drug Talk & Everything we do you can visit us at our website, www.realdrugtalk.com.au We would love it if you followed us on social media to keep supporting the message. Our social media handle is @realdrugtalk on socials. 

Hack
How safe are alcohol delivery services?

Hack

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 30:00


A ton of alcohol delivery services have popped up across the country during the pandemic. They can be super convenient - but some people are worried they could also be damaging and even fatal. Young people all over the world are getting ready to protest at Glasgow's climate conference, including a 16-year-old climate activist from the US. Plus, while Canberra is on track to become the most vaccinated places in the world, remote Indigenous communities are still struggling to get their first jabs. Live guests: Professor Peter Miller, alcohol and violence researcher at Deakin University Alexandria Villaseñor, American climate activist Professor James Ward, Pitjantjatjara and Nukunu epidemiologist from The University of Queensland

Institute of Modern Art
In Conversation, Yhonnie Scarce

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 51:21


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Recorded via video conference on the 27th of August, the artist is joined by IMA Executive Director Liz Nowell in conversation. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name.

Institute of Modern Art
09 Missile Park - Interpretive Text

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 5:03


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
08 Missile Park - Audio Description

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 3:52


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
07 Dinah - Interpretive Text

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 1:27


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
06 Dinah - Audio Description

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 2:38


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
05 The Cultivation Of Whiteness - Interpretive Text

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 1:29


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
04 The Cultivation Of Whitness - Audio Description

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 3:00


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
03 Blood On The Wattle - Interpretive Text

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 1:53


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
02 Blood On The Wattle - Audio Description

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 2:19


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

Institute of Modern Art
01 Introduction To Missile Park By Yhonnie Scarce

Institute of Modern Art

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 1:36


Missile Park by Yhonnie Scarce is an exhibition at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane which runs from 17 July to 18 September, 2021. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia in 1973, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations ranging from the intimate to the architectural, each full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Missile Park is a survey exhibition co-commissioned by the IMA with ACCA, Melbourne. It brings together work from the last 15 years of Scarce's practice, alongside a major new commission from which the exhibition takes its name. This audio tour developed by Jan Pyke will describe four key works from Missile Park, followed by didactic text written by exhibition co-curators Lisa Waup, Liz Nowell, and Max Delaney to aid interpretation. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this exhibition tour discusses images of deceased people.

ACCA Podcast
Nuclear: Yhonnie Scarce, Mykaela Saunders and Dimity Hawkins

ACCA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 68:14


Listen now to a conversation between between Yhonnie Scarce, Kokatha and Nukunu artist from South Australia, Mykaela Saunders, writer, teacher, and community researcher and Dimity Hawkins, Australian activist, researcher and academic. This podcast concludes the series produced in association with 'Yhonnie Scarce: Missile Park', including Glass with Yhonnie Scarce, Kristel Britcher and Lisa Slade, Architecture with Louis Mokak, Mikhail Rodrick and Kim Bridgland, Family with Hannah Presley and Lisa Waup and Concrete Archives with Yhonnie Scarce and Lisa Radford.

ACCA Podcast
Concrete Archives: Yhonnie Scarce and Lisa Radford

ACCA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 44:49


Listen now to a conversation between Yhonnie Scarce, Kokatha and Nukunu artist from South Australia and Lisa Radford, artist and writer about their collaborative project 'Concrete Archives.' Stay tuned for further podcasts to be released, produced in association with 'Yhonnie Scarce: Missile Park.'

ACCA Podcast
Glass: Yhonnie Scarce, Kristel Britcher and Lisa Slade

ACCA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 45:00


Listen now to a discussion about the medium of glass between Yhonnie Scarce, Kokatha and Nukunu artist from South Australia, Kristel Britcher, artist, designer and head of the Jam Factory glass studio, and Lisa Slade, Assistant Director at the Art Gallery of South Australia. Stay tuned for further podcasts to be released, produced in association with 'Yhonnie Scarce: Missile Park', on view at ACCA until 14 June.

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast
Word Up: Tilly Tjala Thomas

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2021 3:52


From an early age Tilly began learning her Nukunu from her parents through games and walking on country.

word up nukunu language revitalisation
Word Up - ABC RN
Word Up: Tilly Tjala Thomas

Word Up - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2021 3:52


From an early age Tilly began learning her Nukunu from her parents through games and walking on country.

word up nukunu language revitalisation
Word Up - ABC RN
Word Up: Tilly Tjala Thomas

Word Up - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2021 3:52


From an early age Tilly began learning her Nukunu from her parents through games and walking on country.

word up nukunu language revitalisation
ACCA Podcast
Yhonnie Scarce in conversation with Daniel Browning

ACCA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 53:20


Listen now to Yhonnie Scarce in conversation with Daniel Browning, producer and presenter of Awaye! on ABC Radio National, as they unpack a range of ideas in Scarce’s practice and consider the works on display in the artist’s major solo survey, 'Yhonnie Scarce: Missile Park'. Yhonnie Scarce is an artist known for sculptural installations which span architecturally-scaled public art projects to intimately-scaled assemblages replete with personal and cultural histories. Scarce is a master glass-blower, which she puts to the service of spectacular and spectral installations full of aesthetic, cultural and political significance. Her work also engages the photographic archive and found objects to explore the impact and legacies of colonial and family histories and memory. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, South Australia, and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Daniel Browning is an Aboriginal journalist, radio broadcaster, documentary maker, sound artist and writer. Currently, he produces and presents Awaye!, the Indigenous art and culture program on ABC RN, a specialist radio network of Australia’s national broadcaster. Awaye! surveys contemporary Indigenous cultural practice across the arts spectrum. A visual arts graduate, Daniel is also a widely-published freelance arts writer. He is a former guest editor of Artlink Indigenous, and the curator of Blak Box, a specially-designed sound pavilion commissioned by Urban Theatre Projects. He studied English and Art History at the University of Queensland before graduating with a degree in visual arts from the Queensland University of Technology. Daniel is a descendant of the Bundjalung and Kullilli peoples of far northern New South Wales and south-western Queensland. Image: Yhonnie Scarce in conversation with Daniel Browning at ACCA. Photograph: Arini Byng

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast
Introducing Tilly Tjala Thomas

AWAYE! - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2021 7:24


Nukunu teen Tilly Tjala Thomas has been compared to the likes of Alice Skye and Thelma Plum.

arts indigenous rn aboriginal thelma plum alice skye nukunu awaye rudi bremer
SmartArts
Looking Glass, Flesh After Fifty and French Impressionism

SmartArts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2021 48:55


Tai Snaith returns to the studio for the fortnightly visual arts segment Art Attack, chatting about her artistic process whilst working from home, and reviewing Judy Watson and Yhonnie Scarce’s ‘Looking Glass’, on display at the TarraWarra Museum of Art. Described by curator Hetti Perkins as both “a love song and lament for country”, this exhibition sees Watson, a Waanyi artist, and Scarce, a Kokatha and Nukunu artist, explore the painful, dark history of the Australian landscape in poignant synergy. Jane Scott, Curator of Flesh After Fifty at the Abbotsford Convent introduces the exhibition’s program of events, challenging ageism, sexism, and body shame to celebrate and promote older women within the art world. Featuring commissions from 14 dynamic Australian artists, the exhibition includes talks from both artists and medical professionals on subjects such as menopause and family violence.Finally, Dr Miranda Wallace, Senior Curator at the NGV announces the gallery’s winter offering, French Impressionism, featuring 79 works which have never previously been exhibited in Australia. Presented in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the exhibition will chart the major developments of this artistic period through key figures such as Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Edgar Degas. 

SmartArts
Cats, musicals, looking glasses, awards, and films! SmartArts goes out with a bang!

SmartArts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2020 46:02


Ireland in the mid-1800s was not a particularly happy or pleasant time as it was the period of the Great Hunger. Tom Sullivan, writer and director of the film, ARRACHT joins Richard to chat about the impact of the great hunger on Irish Culture and the way it's explored in ARRACHT. Every year, Creative Partnerships Australia gives out awards to celebrate philanthropy in the arts sector. Richard is joined by the CEO of Creative Partnerships Australia, Fiona Menzies, to discuss the 2020 awards winners, plus provide an overview of the awards and why philanthropy is an important part of the arts sector. Waanyi artist Judy Watson and Kokatha and Nukunu artist Yhonnie Scarce share recent and personally painful histories of the destruction, exploitation, and degradation of land and of colonisation. Curator of the TarraWarra Museum of Art, Hetti Perkins discusses with Richard Judy and Yhonnie’s latest exhibition Looking Glass. Detailing Australia’s secret and dirty war—a battle fought on many fronts from colonial massacres to Stolen Generations, from the Maralinga bomb tests to the climate emergency. Looking Glass is being exhibited at TarraWarra from November 28th to March 8th.The Melbourne Fringe Festival is a mix of wacky and wonderful shows. Two such shows are CATS: The Movie, the Musical, The Production, The Artist & Lousical The Musical, created by Jean Tong and Lou Wall respectively. One is a mockumentary that punches down on a musical that has been “piss taken to the ends of the Earth and back,” whilst the other is a pop music comedy, part stand up, part song, and part “online meme content”. Both shows were available to stream online as part of the Melbourne Fringe Festival’s 2020 programming. ARRACHT (Trailer) | YouTubeIreland Picks ‘Arracht’ for Oscars’ International Feature Film Race | VarietyMeet our 2020 Creative Partnerships Award recipients | Creative Partnerships AustraliaMATCH Lab | Creative Partnerships AustraliaPlus1 | Creative Partnerships AustraliaLooking Glass | TarraWarra Museum of ArtCATS: The Movie, the Musical, The Production, The Artist | Melbourne FringeLousical The Musical | Melbourne Fringe

triple j Unearthed
Top 5 Songs of the Week: November 13th

triple j Unearthed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2020 23:47


Meet the 17 year old solo artist making gorgeous indie folk in Nukunu language and we play a new track from a Brisbane rapper making moves in the local drill scene. New from Aeroplane Mode, Muki, Tbi$h, Tilly Tjala Thomas and NYXEN.

triple j Unearthed
Top 5 Songs of the Week: November 13th

triple j Unearthed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2020 23:47


Meet the 17 year old solo artist making gorgeous indie folk in Nukunu language and we play a new track from a Brisbane rapper making moves in the local drill scene. New from Aeroplane Mode, Muki, Tbi$h, Tilly Tjala Thomas and NYXEN.

Lyden Af Et Bedre Liv
#128 - None-Dualistisk Terapi - Enhedens Spejl - Nukunu Jørgen Larsen

Lyden Af Et Bedre Liv

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2019 64:42


"Alt hvad der er, er bevidsthed. Uvidenhed er at opfatte verden som virkelig, at tro at du er kroppen og at du er adskilt fra det guddommelige" Sådan siger Nukunu i sin bog, Enhedens Spejl, og i dette interview går vi ned i, hvad han mener.  Læn dig tilbage ind i samtalen, tillad dig selv at tage det ind og sæt den på igen ved lejlighed. Som Nukunu siger har en rigtig spirituel lærer, ikke en lære, men en væren. Her kan man opleve at blive spejlet - af sin guru. Nukunu har trænet med den indiske mystiker Osho, og siden Maharaji og flere andre meditationslærere. I den none-dualistiske terapi Nukunu udbyder er målet, at man ikke tror på, at ens problemer er virkelige - for de er ikke-permanente.  Nøglen er at give slip på alle de falske ideer, som får sindet til at kæmpe mod sig selv Men hvad sker der så, når "virkeligheden" kalder  - i form af jobcenternotifikationer? Det har Nukunu et eksempel på, hvor en klient begynder at kæmpe med sin psykologi.  Lyt med og helst et par gange - vi taler også lidt om Nukunus horoskop naturligvis. Du kan købe den anbefalelsesværdige bog her: https://visdomsbogerne.dk/ Nukunu kan du læse mere om her: http://nukunu.net/ Indtil vi høres ved igen, gentænk alt, måske især hele din virkelighed :-)  - Mannah www.mannahguldager.com

Aboriginal Way radio
Nukunu native title determination

Aboriginal Way radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2019 18:08


The Federal Court has recognised that the Nukunu people are native title holders over a large area of South Australia around the city of Port Pirie. On this program we hear from the emotional Federal Court determination hearing which was held in the small town of Port Germein on the coast at the top of the Spencer Gulf.Speakers:Federal Court Justice CharlesworthJohn Turner, Nukunu ElderRose Turner, Nukunu original named claimantLindsay Thomas, Nukunu Elder and claimant

Word Up - ABC RN
Word Up: Anil Junior Samy

Word Up - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2018 6:07


Nukunu is a heritage language - one without fluent speakers. But that doesn't mean it's not being spoken.

anil samy word up nukunu language revitalisation
Word Up - ABC RN
Word Up: Anil Junior Samy

Word Up - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2018 6:07


Nukunu is a heritage language - one without fluent speakers. But that doesn't mean it's not being spoken.

anil samy word up nukunu language revitalisation
FIELD WORK
Episode 3 - Indigenous Trauma with Yhonnie Scarce

FIELD WORK

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2018 27:25


In Episode 3 of FIELD WORK, Drew Pettifer speaks to artist Yhonnie Scarce, academic Odette Kaleda and curator Clothilde Bullen about complex histories of Indigenous Trauma. Yhonnie Scarce is a Kokatha and Nukunu woman from South Australia. She uses the unlikely medium of glass to explore the treatment of Aboriginal Australians in both historic and contemporary contexts.

Talking History
Dr Skye Krichauff: A boomerang, apricot pies, a pocketful of porridge and other stories

Talking History

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2017 57:12


George Wauchope Cameron arrived in the Wirrabara district in the 1850s. For over fifty years Aboriginal people – the Nukunu – regularly camped on ‘Doughboy Creek’, the land purchased by Cameron in the 1870s. In this paper Dr Krichauff draws on stories of Aboriginal-settler interaction told to her by six of Cameron’s descendants during site visits and interviews. Dr Krichauff shows, by recognising the importance of place – and continuity of people in place – and the degree to which lived experiences (of past and present generations) determine what is remembered, we are better able to analyse and, ultimately, understand, the absence of Aboriginal people in the historical consciousness of mid-northern South Australian settler descendants. Skye Krichauff is a historian and anthropologist who is interested in historical cross-cultural relations and understanding the enduring legacies of colonialism. Her doctoral thesis (conferred in 2015) was a place-centred ethnography which investigated the absence of Aboriginal people in the historical consciousness of settler descendants. Skye has previously worked on an international project 'Social Memory, Historical Injustice', as a history researcher for an Aboriginal community organisation and on various research projects including the compilation of a register of SA and NT Aboriginal‒settler conflict. Nharangga wargunni buggi-buggilu, a rewritten version of Skye’s Masters thesis, was published by Wakefield Press in 2011. Her rewritten doctoral thesis will be published by Anthem Press in early 2017. Recorded on 13 September 2016

National Book Festival 2015 Videos
Young Adventures: 2015 National Book Festival

National Book Festival 2015 Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2015 47:34


Sep. 5, 2015. Authors Jared Thomas and Bruce Pascoe join with author/illustrator Dub Leffler to share their stories, characters and insights at the 2015 Library of Congress National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. Speaker Biography: Jared Thomas is a Nukunu Aboriginal Australian author of from the Southern Flinders Ranges in South Australia. His debut young adult novel “Sweet Guy” was short listed for three major Australian literature awards. His plays “Flash Red Ford” and “Love, Land and Money” have toured Uganda and Kenya and been featured at festivals. Thomas has also written the children’s book “Dallas Davis, the Scientist and the City Kids.” His latest young adult novel, “Calypso Summer,” is the story of a young Nukunu man finding his way and himself after high school; it has received a State Library of Queensland Black&Write Fellowship and was included in iTunes’ best books of April 2014. Thomas is an arts development officer at Arts, South Australia and lives in Adelaide with his family. Speaker Biography: Australian Bruce Pascoe is a Yuin, Bunurong and Tasmanian who has written more than 25 books of fiction, nonfiction and poetry. He has widely varied experience from his work as a teacher, farmer, fisherman, barman, fencing contractor, Aboriginal language researcher, archaeological site worker, lecturer and editor. Some of his works include the short story collections “Nightjar” and “Ocean” and the historical nonfiction books “Cape Otway: Coast of Secrets” and “Convincing Ground.” In 2013 Pascoe received the Australian Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Young Adult Fiction for “Fog a Dox” (Magabala Books). His most recent nonfiction work, “Dark Emu: Black Seeds: Agriculture or Accident?” describes in depth the land management and agricultural practices of the Australian Aborigines and includes excerpts from early explorers’ diaries that demonstrate the extent to which modern retellings of early Aboriginal history understate the sophistication of these systems. Pascoe is a member of the Wathaurong Aboriginal Cooperative of southern Victoria. Speaker Biography: Dub Leffler is an acclaimed and highly sought-after Indigenous Australian illustrator of children’s literature. He grew up as one of 13 children in the small town of Quirindi, south of Tamworth in New South Wales and is descended from the Bigambul and Mandandanji people of south west Queensland. Leffler began his visual arts career as an animator and has worked as a muralist and art teacher, as well as in collaboration with internationally recognized illustrators such as Colin Thompson, Shaun Tan and Banksy. Currently, he has illustrated 18 children’s books. The first book Leffler wrote as well as illustrated is the internationally acclaimed “Once There Was a Boy." For transcript, captions, and more information, visit http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=6960

Buddha at the Gas Pump
267. Nukunu Larsen

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2014 80:55


Nukunu was born in Odense, Denmark 1947. He left school 13 years old. He was declared hopeless so he was given no education certificate. He worked and trained as a house painter for the next 4 years. After 9 months … Continue reading →