Barangga artist Debra Beale鈥檚 healing journey
黑料网大事记 Art & Design Fine Arts student Debra Beale鈥檚 work in fashion and cultural adornment features natural dyes and objects she finds as she walks in the bush.
黑料网大事记 Art & Design Fine Arts student Debra Beale鈥檚 work in fashion and cultural adornment features natural dyes and objects she finds as she walks in the bush.
黑料网大事记 Galleries current exhibition, , is a celebration of First Nations design practices and cultural knowledge. The exhibition, which was born out of gatherings of First Nations designers in 2022, is a way of sharing and passing on the skills and the stories of the designers, as well as exhibiting their work. And designer and maker Debra Beale was invited by a friend to take part.
Beale has been creating since she was a child, making things from what she finds, what she notices and what the ancestors put in her path. Back then, in Griffith, she鈥檇 go to the tip and marvel at what people threw out. Some things were brand new. Nowadays she cruises through op shops and Reverse Garbage in Marrickville, Sydney. She was upcycling before upcycling was a word.
鈥淚 get a lot of my inspiration from turning old things people throw away into something new,鈥 she says.
That and the bush. 鈥淔or me it鈥檚 like I鈥檓 on a healing journey, so when I鈥檓 walking, I鈥檒l come across a feather, or something, and it鈥檚 like the ancestors left it there for me, and I鈥檒l pick it up and take it home. Add it to my collection. And when I start working, I鈥檒l come across that object, and it fits with what I鈥檓 doing.鈥 Beale lives in Warrimoo, formally known as Karabah (Where Eagles Land) in the Blue Mountains, Darug Nation. 鈥淚t is my home and a place where I can connect to my deepest inner self,鈥 she says.
鈥淚 am passionate about accessing and sharing my Aboriginal art and culture, using contemporary media to connect with traditional themes, through mediums such as Australian bush jewellery, paintings, sculptures, sculpture installations, photography, ceramics and textiles.鈥
A heritage that led to displacement
Beale鈥檚 mob comes from the Palawa/Yorta Yorta and Gamilaraay/Wonnarua nations, and it meant her youth was affected by an Australian culture that forced her family into a resettlement program, and that told her she wasn鈥檛 smart enough to study past Year 10. (Her classmate Stan Grant was told the same thing. His father took him to Canberra to finish his schooling. Beale went to Bathurst.) While she didn鈥檛 complete school, Beale took part in traineeships, opened an Aboriginal preschool (still running today), raised three sons and continued to create 鈥 especially cultural adornments with three really good friends back in the 90s.
鈥淲e would make adornments taking something from the bush, the rainforest, the ocean and the desert.鈥 Which led to other projects like making paper embedded with natural materials. 鈥淥ne project leads to another,鈥 explains Beale. 鈥淭hey are all connected.鈥
Beale first studied art as part of a pilot course in Aboriginal Art and Fashion at CIT in Canberra 30 years ago. She was inspired by the renowned First Nations artist Bronwyn Bancroft, who was one of the first Australians to put her clothes on the global runway. The course involved putting design on to fabric through processes like screen printing.
A heritage that led to healing
And that inspiration has powerfully shaped Beale鈥檚 artistic direction. Finding ways to incorporate her culture into her design. During the yarning that grew into the barangga exhibition she says, 鈥淚t was really inspiring to reconnect with people I hadn鈥檛 seen in twenty years, and to see how far they鈥檝e come.鈥
It was part of the reason she got in touch with the Global Indigenous Runway folk and asked if there was any chance she could put her clothes on the runway this year.
Another process, she would describe as part of the healing. 鈥淚 wanted to tell my story. I was holding something inside and I needed to get that out, but I wasn鈥檛 quite sure how I was going to exhibit it.鈥 Her Sacred 1 Collection ended up both opening and closing the event.
The story Beale wanted to share is a hard one. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about having a voice and people are not listening. I wanted to start my journey of healing. And that means I have to acknowledge what鈥檚 happening and move on. In the clothing, there鈥檚 layers of trauma, intergenerational trauma, transgenerational trauma. I hear stories about our young people, deaths in custody, children being taken away, it was just so devastating for me to see that this is still going on. I just created work鈥 there was a lot of blood, sweat and tears in creating that. I kept redyeing the cloth.鈥
When people look at the collection, they see beauty, and that鈥檚 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 a healing journey,鈥 explains Beale. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like people smiling but underneath there鈥檚 a story. It鈥檚 embedded in the cloth. The healing process is the beauty of it.鈥
From a young woman who was relocated because of her Aboriginality and told she wasn鈥檛 smart enough to finish school, Beale has reconnected with her culture, and with her people, and now wants to speak into the lives of young Aboriginal people, help them build strengths, share cultural knowledge. 鈥淚 love sharing, what I know, what I鈥檝e learned and stories that I hold. If I can help one young Aboriginal person that鈥檚 an achievement for me and hopefully it鈥檚 like a ripple effect.鈥
Beale is about to commence a stint as a with Carriageworks.
The barangga Exhibition will be at 黑料网大事记 Galleries Paddington until July 30.
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