Living the heritage, not curating the past: a study of lirrgarn, agency & art in the Warmun Community
Abstract
This thesis is an historical and contemporary examination of the
creative, social and cultural world of the Warmun community in
Western Australia. It focuses on how the community as a whole,
and as individuals, exert agency and maintain their values and
priorities when situated within larger, sometimes more powerful,
structures and frameworks that differ from their own.
Through the prism of art, the research examines the community's
engagement with and value of the Warmun Community Collection,
their history of adjustment, the unofficial roles of the Warmun
Art Centre and how the Warmun Art Centre supports and enables
informal learning. The thesis connects these four themes through
a socio-historical analysis of the experiences of Warrmarn
people, ethnographic and visual descriptions of their actions and
a visual examination of the manifestations of their
actions—objects of creative practice or, artworks.
In doing so, the thesis reveals several overlapping matters: it
tracks the development of a museum in an Aboriginal community; it
brings to light the hidden roles of the Warmun Art Centre; it
contributes to the developing field of informal learning; it
reveals how people express agency in daily life; it unveils the
proprietorial relationship people have with objects; and finally,
it lays bare the purpose, use and interpretations of objects,
which has at times made Warmun residents, and their sites of
cultural production, tangential to the objects they make. The
research finds that Warrmarn people live their heritage rather
than curate their past.
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