Collections: ABN AMRO Bank, Oprah Winfrey, Pierce Brosnan, Prince of Saudi Arabia, Michael Schuhmacher, ATSIC, Prime Minister of Turkey, Sultan Indris of Sallengoor, Cambridge University, Woodside. Exhibitions: 1974 Mornington Penninsula Vic. 2000 Rome. Korea. Noosa Regional Gallery. 2000 Parliament House in Brisbane. 2001 Noosa Regional Gallery. 2004 ABN Amro Tower, Sydney. 2003 Volvo Gallery Sydney. 2015 Cooee Gallery Sydney. Notes: Kurun Warun was born in Australia in 1966. He is a member of the indigenous Guntijamara tribe and is a descendant from Truganini, the last Tasmanian indigenous queen. Kurun Warun whose name means 'Hissing Swan' lives in the Noosa hinterland in South East Queensland. He is best known for his exceptional dot art and talent as a didgeridoo musician. He expresses his culture through art and music, and has won international recognition in these fields. Starting at just eight years of age, he has become a sort after artist; his works now are valuable pieces of collectable aboriginal art. His aboriginal dot paintings have a traditional meaning which is not always immediately discernable, but within the colours, lines and space we are led through an underlying story. Kurun Warun also finds expression through traditional dance and music. Being an accomplished didgeridoo musician he has performed around the world in places as far flung as Italy and Korea. He played a role in the Sydney 2000 Olympic games as a traditional artist, has appeared on NBC in the United States and before Chelsea Clinton, former US president's daughter. Although it was later in life that he really developed his art practice, Kurun Warun was also related through his extended family to artist Lin Onus and musician Archie Roach. Kurun says "Archie Roach's uncle was my grandfather. Mum used to babysit Archie." Archie Roach's great songs of dispossession were the stories of Aboriginal people at Framlingham. Kurun Warun's mother came from Framlingham mission near Warnambool, on the south-west coast of Victoria. Kurun Warun can also claim fifth generation descent from Truganini, famously called the last Tasmanian, who had come from Tasmania in 1838 to Port Phillip. Kurun Warun's great grandmother was Truganini's granddaughter. The location of Framlingham along the Hopkins River had started as an Anglican mission in 1861 and operated as an Aboriginal reserve until 1916. Framlingham was home to Girai Wurrung and Djargurd Wurrung people from the regions around Warnambool. These people had lived around the Western District Lakes for thousands of years, leaving a history of archaeological sites including fish traps, rock scatters, middens and burial sites. The Gunditjmara people from further north from Portland and Lake Condah were also forcibly moved to Framlingham but fought to settle closer to their own lands. After the closure of Framlingham in 1916 some of the residents remained in the community and were finally granted ownership in 1971 of the 237 hectares of the land in 1971. Today the only buildings that remain from Framlingham are the old church and one hut that date from about 1920. Kurun Warun's use of colour reflects the primary resources of indigenous people - red, black and white are used to convey cultural body markings and structures found in nature.
Dry Season
Monday – Friday: 9am – 4:30pm
Saturday: 9am – 2:30pm
Sunday: 9am – 2:30pm
Wet Season
Monday – Friday: 9:30am – 3:00pm
Saturday: 9:30am – 2:00pm
Sunday: Closed