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A Rainbow of Tomorrows at KHT

First Peoples
This is a past event
First Peoples

Dates

9 October 2022 - 20 November 2022
Daily
10am - 5pm

Venue

Koorie Heritage Trust

Access

Lift access
Wheelchair accessible

Getting There

A Blak queer futurism art exhibition.

A Rainbow of Tomorrows invites queer creative mob to carve out a space for respite from the heteropatriarchal settler-colony and explore individual and collective visions of utopia. A multidisciplinary exhibition of queer First Nations artists’ work, along with multiple activating events, A Rainbow of Tomorrows is a guest-curated project led by Stone Motherless Cold.

The exhibition will feature film, sculpture, digital painting, drawings, textiles and photography, each in conversation with one another and with performance that will unfold in the space throughout the show’s duration. This includes opening and closing night events showcasing drag and cabaret performances, the Hazy Lounge (16 October) sharing spoken word and musical acts, a life-drawing session (21 October) with models from the Motherless Haus, and a panel discussion (19 October) exploring Blak queer futurist perspectives.

Each multidisciplinary in their practice, featured artists include: Rémy Cohen, Yorta Yorta, Boon Wurrung; Stone Motherless Cold, Eastern Arrernte; Peter Waples-Crowe, Ngarigo; Kira Djnalie, Yorta Yorta, Wergaia; Bromley Isombard; Darcy McConnel, Dja Dja, Wurrung, Yorta Yorta; Elijah Money, Wiradjuri; Pierra Van Sparkes, Pibbulman Noongar; Arika Waulu, Gunnai, Gunditjmara, Djapwurrung; and Aunty Annette Xiberras, Wurundjeri.

Curator’s statement

“The apocalypse has come. Already living in a dystopian world, you are invited into A Rainbow of Tomorrows, to gather and celebrate in sanctum. Though, what does a Blak queer utopia look like right now? Tomorrow? Or many yesterdays ago? As our apocalypse was the beginning of a colonial ‘utopia’. First Nations peoples have been busy and are tired of resisting and surviving against a colonial dream, one that makes no space for queer Blak folks. A Rainbow of Tomorrows envisages a Blak queer utopia, one that keeps building the blocks of the Blak queer renaissance, reclaiming and decolonising utopian and dystopian fantasies.” – Stone Motherless Cold.

About the curator

Stone Motherless Cold is an Arrernte drag gem, currently based in Naarm. Smooth and sensual, bold and graphic, this crystalline trophy posing as humanoid. She is a drag artist, producer, writer and visual artist, celebrating spaces of Blak queer futurism. Ms Cold is head of the Motherless Collective. 1st Runner Miss First Nations 2021 (Queens -The Ultimate Drag Crown) and title winner of the Victorian NAIDOC LGBTQIA+ 2019 event.

The Koorie Heritage Trust, in partnership with Melbourne Fringe is proud to acknowledge exhibition partners Creative Victoria, City of Melbourne, ANZ and the Indigenous Visual Arts and Industry Support Program.

Image: PETER WAPLES-CROWE (Ngarigu), Fractured Power 2022, collage and synthetic polymer paint on canvas 3 parts, Collection of the artist, photographed by Christian Capurro