ART Book Launch

ART Book Launch

Reading and Q&A with authors Charmaine Papertalk Green and John Kinsella.

Celebrate the opening day of Boodjar: Through the Works of Meeyakba Shane Pickett and the launch of ART Poems by Charmaine Papertalk Green and John Kinsella.

Join as at the AGWA Design Store for a reading and Q&A with the authors and then stay on and enjoy a coffee at the AGWA Cafe & Bar.

ART is the second collaborative poetry work from Charmaine Papertalk Green and John Kinsella. While ART is a collaborative work, each poet’s contributions are presented independently. They showcase their talents in a dynamic exchange, working innovatively to present a poetic response to artworks.

The focus of their attention is a series of paintings by the late Nyoongar painter Shane Pickett. Pickett’s work provides provocation for both poets to reflect on their own lives and histories on Nyoongar country. Their interwoven dialogue examines the politics of the contemporary art world, of museums, archives, and galleries.

Read more about ART at Magabala Books

Related Information

to
AGWA design store
FREE

Share

@artgallerywa
#artgallerywa

Yamaji poet Charmaine Papertalk Green writes: ‘this is my data, and this is my sovereign right’. Settler poet John Kinsella acknowledges that: ‘being colonial has many degrees as well as many different avenues of denial.’ In this nation shattering dialogue of fierce poetry Papertalk Green and Kinsella lay the foundations for First Nations’ data sovereignty of Country, history, and truth. CPG and JK are brave enough to have the conversation that this nation has so far shied away from.

Dr Jeanine Leane

About Dr Charmaine Papertalk Green

Charmaine Papertalk Green was born at Eradu (between Geraldton and Mullewa) on Southern Yamaji country. She is a member of the Wajarri, Badimaya and Nhanagardi Wilunyu cultural groups of Yamaji Nation in Western Australia.

Green is a visual artist, poet and writer and began writing poetry in Mullewa in the late 1970’s. Charmaine was instrumental in the incubation of the nationally and internationally touring exhibition “Ilgarijiri – Things belonging to the Sky” arts and cultural project a Yamaji Art collaboration with the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy Curtin University, Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project Australian Government and City of Greater Geraldton.

Her publications include Just Like That (Fremantle Art Press 2007); Tiptoeing Tod the Tracker (Oxford University Press 2014); collaboration with WA poet John Kinsella, False Claim of Colonial Thieves (Magabala Books 2018); Nganajungu Yagu (Cordite Publishing Inc.’s 2019); and numerous anthologies and other publications.

In 2019 Charmaine was shortlisted in Adelaide Festival John Bray Award 2020 and the ALS Gold Medal 2019 for False Claim of Colonial Thieves. In 2020 Charmaine won the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2020 poetry category, shortlisted for the Australian Literature Society Gold Medal (2020) winning the ALS Gold Medal 2020 and shortlisted in the 2020 Queensland Premiers Literary Award Judith Wright Calanthe Prize for Nganajungu Yagu (Cordite Publishing Inc.

Charmaine lives in Geraldton Western Australia.

About John Kinsella

John Kinsella is a non-Indigenous collaborator and the author of over thirty books.

His many awards include the Australian Prime Minister's Literary Award for Poetry, the Victorian Premier's Award for Poetry, the John Bray Award for Poetry, the Judith Wright Calanthe Award for Poetry, and the Western Australian Premier's Award for Poetry (three times).

His most recent works include the poetry volumes Drowning in Wheat: Selected Poems (Picador 2016) and On the Outskirts (UQP 2017) Recent story collections include Crow's Breath (Transit Lounge 2015) and Old Growth (Transit Lounge 2017) and a recent critical volume is Polysituatedness (Manchester University Press 2017). With Tracy Ryan he is the co-editor of The Fremantle Press Anthology of The Western Australian Poetry (2017).

He is a Fellow of Churchill College Cambridge University and Professor of Literature and Environment at Curtin University Western Australia. He lives on Ballardong Noongar land at Jam Tree Gully in the Western Australian wheatbelt and went to high school on Yamaji land in Geraldton.

On Saturday 27 August, the Gallery is open 10am-3pm only as we prepare for the AGWA Foundation Gala supporting women in the arts. Some exhibition access will be disrupted with two Tracks We Share ground floor galleries closed. AGWA Rooftop bar will be closed, reopening at 2pm Sunday. Details