Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit

Kurunpa Kunpu is the outcome of a 3-year, cross-cultural design collaboration between Tanya Singer, Errol Evans and Trent Jansen that began when Tanya, Errol and Maruku Arts invited Trent to their homelands at Railway Bore in remote South Australia. The designers Yarned while they worked in Railway...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jansen, Trent
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_85706
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spelling ftunswworks:oai:unsworks.library.unsw.edu.au:1959.4/unsworks_85706 2024-05-12T08:03:46+00:00 Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit Jansen, Trent 2023-10-19 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_85706 unknown https://www.regionalarchitecture.net.au/raa-events/beginnings http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_85706 metadata only access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_14cb CC-BY https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Regional Architecture Association - Beginnings - First People's Architecture, Coolendel NSW, 2023-10-19 - 2023-10-22 conference presentation http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/R60J-J5BD 2023 ftunswworks 2024-04-17T15:02:21Z Kurunpa Kunpu is the outcome of a 3-year, cross-cultural design collaboration between Tanya Singer, Errol Evans and Trent Jansen that began when Tanya, Errol and Maruku Arts invited Trent to their homelands at Railway Bore in remote South Australia. The designers Yarned while they worked in Railway Bore and in Thirroul on the New South Wales South Coast, learning from, and about, each other’s unique relationships with Country, family and community. By engaging with their respective cultural practices and traditions, the designers have realised a collection of works that speak to the resilience of both First Nations People and ngura (Country), celebrating the potential for inter-cultural collaboration to embody diverse cultural values and lived experiences. Engaging processes of Deep Listening to each other and Country, the collection is in part a response to climate change experienced by the designers’ communities in remote South Australia and a poignant reminder of the need for environmental responsibility and action. The rapidly warming, drying landscape threatens the lives of community members and the ecosystem and, in turn, connection to Country and culture. Employing motifs of drying, cracked earth and protection, the collection is a powerful visual representation of the critical thresholds in the Earth’s system and the consequences of pushing against those boundaries. Kurunpa Kunpu invites reflection on the distribution of environmental burdens and benefits and the importance of reengaging in Relationality between community, culture and Country. Conference Object First Nations UNSW Sydney (The University of New South Wales): UNSWorks
institution Open Polar
collection UNSW Sydney (The University of New South Wales): UNSWorks
op_collection_id ftunswworks
language unknown
description Kurunpa Kunpu is the outcome of a 3-year, cross-cultural design collaboration between Tanya Singer, Errol Evans and Trent Jansen that began when Tanya, Errol and Maruku Arts invited Trent to their homelands at Railway Bore in remote South Australia. The designers Yarned while they worked in Railway Bore and in Thirroul on the New South Wales South Coast, learning from, and about, each other’s unique relationships with Country, family and community. By engaging with their respective cultural practices and traditions, the designers have realised a collection of works that speak to the resilience of both First Nations People and ngura (Country), celebrating the potential for inter-cultural collaboration to embody diverse cultural values and lived experiences. Engaging processes of Deep Listening to each other and Country, the collection is in part a response to climate change experienced by the designers’ communities in remote South Australia and a poignant reminder of the need for environmental responsibility and action. The rapidly warming, drying landscape threatens the lives of community members and the ecosystem and, in turn, connection to Country and culture. Employing motifs of drying, cracked earth and protection, the collection is a powerful visual representation of the critical thresholds in the Earth’s system and the consequences of pushing against those boundaries. Kurunpa Kunpu invites reflection on the distribution of environmental burdens and benefits and the importance of reengaging in Relationality between community, culture and Country.
format Conference Object
author Jansen, Trent
spellingShingle Jansen, Trent
Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
author_facet Jansen, Trent
author_sort Jansen, Trent
title Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
title_short Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
title_full Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
title_fullStr Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
title_full_unstemmed Kurunpa Kunpu | Strong Spirit
title_sort kurunpa kunpu | strong spirit
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_85706
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Regional Architecture Association - Beginnings - First People's Architecture, Coolendel NSW, 2023-10-19 - 2023-10-22
op_relation https://www.regionalarchitecture.net.au/raa-events/beginnings
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_85706
op_rights metadata only access
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_14cb
CC-BY
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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