The 2019 Ku Arts Symposium in Adelaide brought Aboriginal artists and art centres from across South Australia together to share stories and connect with industry organisations.
Read MoreKu Arts, in partnership with Adelaide College of the Arts, TAFE SA delivered two free six-day workshops to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists and community members living in the Adelaide metropolitan area.
Read MoreVIETNAM – ONE IN, ALL IN was a contemporary exhibition produced by Country Arts SA that explored, expressed, and acknowledged Aboriginal veterans service in the Vietnam War – before, during and after.
Read MoreSince 2006, OUR MOB: Art by South Australian Aboriginal Artists has provided a platform for contemporary First Nations artists to share their stories, ideas and art with audiences. Presented by Adelaide Festival Centre, the annual exhibition showcases the diversity and depth of works created by First Nations artists across South Australia.
Read MoreThis year we have facilitated workshops to support and encourage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists across South Australia to enter the 2019 Our Mob exhibition. Workshops have taken place in Goolwa, Murray Bridge, Mt Gambier, Berri and Adelaide.
Read MoreTo celebrate NAIDOC week in 2019 Ku Arts in partnership with ACE Open presented a panel discussion featuring a range of speakers to reflect on this year’s NAIDOC theme, Voice. Treaty. Truth.
Read MoreThe Dunijba Designs project supported by Ku Art seeks to create a social enterprise business model that will provide employment, skills and an income to local artists.
Read MoreIn June this year the Ku Arts team went along to the Great Kanku-Breakaways Marathon to support artists from the Coober Pedy Art Project in selling their artwork as part of the pop up market place.
Read MoreA two-week creative workshop held in Port Augusta introducing participants to studio skills; canvas quality, frame preparation, stretching and priming, colour mixing and colour theory. Silk screen & textile development, weaving and jewellery making.
Read MoreLaunched in 2018, the Dunjiba Design jewellery project presents local culture through contemporary art and design, providing employment, skills and income to local artists.
Read MoreDuring the Art in Prison pilot participants engaged with creative arts as a means to express culture, reconnect with country and explore art as an economic pathway for rehabilitation once released.
Read MoreThe Dunijba Designs project supported by Ananguku Art seeks to create a social enterprise business model that will provide employment, skills and an income to local artists.
Read MoreThis project and associated carving workshops are part of an ongoing strategy to support the revival of traditional cultural practice for Nukunu and Adnyamathanha men in the Port Augusta region.
Read MoreThe workshop was an intense introduction to the medium and was designed to allow the artists to adapt their existing artistic style to working with glass.
Read MoreRingbalin is a multi-arts project which takes place along the Murray-Darling River, from Queensland to South Australia, uniting Indigenous communities through the maintenance of ceremonies and artefact making and the transfer of cultural knowledge from elders to young people.
Read MoreCreative workshops and professional development opportunities for Aboriginal artists living in Coober Pedy and those who may be visiting from other communities.
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