
SUBMERGE.FM
Friday 21 November, 7 pm to 9 pmSUBMERGE.FM is back! Join us for an immersive evening of music in Blacktown.
Bayadyinyang budyari Dharug yiyura Dharug Ngurra.
Bayady’u budyari Dharug Warunggadgu baranyiin barribugu.
Bayady’u budyari wagulgu yiyuragu Ngurra bimalgu Blacktown City. Flannel flowers dyurali bulbuwul.
Yanmannyang mudayi Dharug Ngurrawa. Walama ngyini budbud dali Dharug Ngurra Dharug yiyura baranyiin barribugu.
We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of this Land, the Dharug people, and their continued connection to Country.
We pay our respects to Elders from yesterday to tomorrow.
We extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples of Blacktown City where the flannel flowers still grow proud and strong.
We will walk softly on this land and open our hearts to Country as the Dharug people have for tens of thousands of years.
Credit to: Dharug woman Rhiannon Wright, daughter of Leanne ‘Mulgo’ Watson Redpath and granddaughter of Aunty Edna Watson
Join us in celebration of the opening of Ghosts in the Kitchen with an evening of First Nations performance, dance, poetry and music.
Step into Ghosts in the Kitchen, an immersive exhibition that explores the complex relationships between food, culture, and identity from the perspective of Indigenous Australian and Oceanic First Nations peoples.
Curated by Rebecca Ray.
Full line up announced soon!
Rebecca Ray (she/her) is a Meriam woman from the Torres Strait Islands and a curator, writer and cultural heritage researcher. Her practice is concerned with the re-Indigenisation, rematriation and reclamation of autonomous and sovereign spaces, rooted in care for culture and community.
Rebecca brings a wealth of curatorial and policy experience to the MCA, having held Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander-identified positions at major institutions including the National Portrait Gallery, Australia, Home of the Arts (HOTA), and Griffith University, Queensland. She is also an alumna of the Wesfarmers Indigenous Leadership Program, partnered with the National Gallery of Australia.
Rebecca holds a Bachelor of Arts (History and Sociology) from Griffith University. She has a research background in decolonisation, identity politics and intersectionality, developed through her early academic work with the Indigenous Higher Research Unit and the Kombumerri Archives Project at Griffith.
This project is presented by Blacktown Arts and supported by Blacktown City Council.