Approaching First Nations Collaborations with Darren Blackman

15aug12:00 pm1:00 pmApproaching First Nations Collaborations with Darren BlackmanOnline webinar

Time

15th August 2024 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm(GMT+10:00)

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Location

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Event Details

12:00pm – 1:00pm Thursday 15th of August 2024

Gureng Gureng/Gangulu man, Darren Blackman has spent over 20years working in remote and regional Queensland from, the Western Qld, the Gulf Country, Cape York and the Torres Strait.

In this webinar, he’ll share his lived and learned experiences, engaging with diverse people and cultures.

Participants will learn about:

  • Common protocols & practices.
  • The uniqueness of First Nations experiences and recent history.
  • Create productive and lasting relationships.

What to Bring:

Please bring questions to discuss with Darren. Flying Arts also recommends having note-taking materials on hand.

Additional Information:

This online session will be held via ClickMeeting a webinar broadcasting room. The webinar will be recorded and uploaded to Flying Arts’ YouTube after the program concludes.

To discuss specific access needs, please contact program@flyingarts.org.au.

Image Credit: Darren Blackman, Stolen (2021), photograph by Colyn Huber.

Additional Information

Your Facilitator: Darren Blackman is a proud Gureng Gureng/Gangalu man from Queensland’s central coast with Kanak South Sea Island heritage from Vanuatu. Blackman grew up in the Sunshine Coast town of Nambour and has been living and working throughout the Far North and Western Queensland since 1995. Through this work, Blackman speaks to some of the issues at the centre of the Australian Government’s Close the Gap campaign, that set intent to achieve health, education and employment equality by 2030 and reduce the seventeen-year life-expectancy gap between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous peoples. Touching on oral history from his Elders and reworking those messages, Blackman channels personal observations and his lived experience, to witness a wide range of Aboriginal perspectives and mainstream political and media inference.