Brokering Aboriginal art: A critical perspective on marketing, institutions, and the state
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Altman, Jon
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Geelong, Vic. : Bowater School of Management and Marketing, Centre for Leisure Management Research, Deakin University
Abstract
Over the past 30 years, visual art has shone as a beacon of Aboriginal cultural
survival, adaptation and efflorescence in post-colonial Australia. This success
has occurred within a broader national context where Aboriginal socioeconomic
status is perceived to have either stagnated or declined. Yet dynamic
and innovative art movements thrive in many remote communities that are
regarded as the most problematic in terms of welfare dependence and social
disintegration.
This lecture explores this apparent paradox by focusing on a history and analysis
of state-sponsorship of arts infrastructure in that Aboriginal arts sector, a form of
sponsorship that has provided the inter-cultural mediation, or brokerage, that has
been pivotal to this unusual arts movement. By then drawing out some emerging
tensions, contestations and challenges I argue that that there is no room for
complacency in arts policy or practice—the new-found success of Indigenous arts
remains fragile.
The lecture concludes with a discussion of the risks to Aboriginal art posed
by recent changes in Indigenous affairs and makes some broad arts policy
observations, based on historical evidence, for the ongoing development and
growth of the nationally significant and internationally acclaimed Aboriginal visual arts sector
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Brokering Aboriginal art: A critical perspective on marketing, institutions, and the state', the 2005 Kenneth Myer Lecture in Arts and Entertainment, presented 7 April 2005 at Bunjilaka Gallery, Melbourne Museum. Edited by Ruth Rentschler of Deakin University Centre for Leisure Management Research.
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