Little Hall, Hamilton, NY 13346, USA

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Symposium on the role of museums and galleries in reconciliation, repatriation, and reparation

3 p.m., Golden Auditorium, Little Hall 

Dr. Margo Smith, director and curator of the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection at the University of Virginia will deliver a keynote talk, "From Deep Listening to Decolonization: How museums are working with Indigenous Australians toward reconciliation and healing."

Other presentations include Curator of the Longyear Museum of Anthropology Christy DeLair with "Decolonize All the Things: Getting below the surface of museums' colonial icebergs" and Associate Professor of Art and Art History Elizabeth Marlowe with "In on the Joke? What to do with difficult statues." Professor of Anthropology and Africana & Latin American Studies Michelle Bigenho will moderate.

This event is supported by the Colgate Arts Council, Museum Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, Geography Department, and Environmental Studies Program.

 

The symposium will be followed by a celebratory welcome reception and remarks at the Dana Arts Center with representatives from the Carrolup Elders Reference Group, Curtin University, Oneida Indian Nation, and Colgate University.

Welcoming Reception, 5 p.m., Picker Art Gallery, second floor, Dana Arts Center

Remarks, 6 p.m., Brehmer Theater, first floor, Dana Arts Center

Koolanga Boodja Neh Nidjuuk (Children Listening and Looking on Country), Colgate Alumni Collect, and Transatlantic Avant-gardes will be on view at the Picker Art Gallery. Find more information about the exhibitions here

 

About Koolanga Boodja Neh Nidjuuk (Children Listening and Looking on Country)

Koolanga Boodja Neh Nidjuuk (Children Listening and Looking on Country), a traveling exhibition organized by the John Curtin Gallery of Curtin University in Perth, Australia, features thirty-eight artworks made by the Aboriginal children from the Carrolup State School at the Carrolup Native Settlement in the late 1940s.

The children artists made use of a vibrant palette to depict the world from their own experiences and started a pictorial landscape tradition that would gain international attention. The works once formed part of a donation to Colgate in 1966 by Herbert Mayer ’29 and remained in the collection of the Picker Art Gallery until 2013 when they were returned to Western Australia. Oversight of the exhibition, education, and research regarding the collection at Curtin University is the responsibility and authority of the Carrolup Elders Reference Group. The Elders have encouraged broad access to the collection through exhibition of the drawings throughout Noongar country in the southwest of Western Australia. This international exhibition honors the enduring relationship between the Noongar community, Curtin, and Colgate in the University's Bicentennial year.

Koolanga Boodja Neh Nidjuuk (Children Listening and Looking on Country) is presented with the guidance of the Carrolup Elders Reference Group and support of the John Curtin Gallery’s JCG Founders Club, Curtin University. The exhibition is partially funded by the Robert J. Gerberg ’59, P’85 Endowment for the Visual Arts, the Tim ’82 and Alexandra Murphy Endowment to Promote the Arts, and by the Friends of the Picker Art Gallery.

 

Image: Waka Mununggurr and Djambawa Marawili at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, 2017. Photography by Tom Cogill.

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