From 6 April, the Australian Museum in Sydney will be hosting an exhibition exploring the journey of one of the last Aboriginal groups to make contact with Europeans.
Colliding Worlds: First contact in the Western Desert, 1932-1984
presents a series of first contact episodes, mixing research and
personal reflections, on the earliest encounters between Europeans
and Pintupi people over the past 75 years.
The Aboriginal people of the Western Desert were among the last
Indigenous communities to make contact with Europeans, most
recently in 1984 when a group of nine Aboriginal people emerged from
their desert home 800km west of Alice Springs.
The Aboriginal
groups from this region, including the Pintupi, Ngalia, Walpiri, Luritja,
Western Arrernte, Ngatatjara and others, have since played a
significant role in the development of contemporary Aboriginal art and
have achieved international acclaim for their work.
Colliding Worlds charts the history of early cultural collisions from
1932 until 1984, and explores the development of the Western Desert
art movement, founded by men who experienced first contact.
The exhibition features previously unseen artefacts and significant
artworks of the Western Desert, as well as photographs from the
internationally renowned Donald Thomson collection held at Museum
Victoria.
The exhibition is developed by Museum Victoria and the National
Aboriginal Cultural Institute – Tandanya. It is supported
by the Commonwealth Government through The Australia Council, its
arts funding and advisory body, and by Visions of Australia, an
Australian Government Program supporting touring exhibitions by
providing funding assistance for the development and touring of
cultural material across Australia.
The exhibition will run until 19 August 2007 and is free with paid museum entry.