Cairns Indigenous Art Fair 2016
Cairns Indigenous Art Fair will be held from 15-17 July for the biggest year ever! The new program and app have launched, featuring a wide variety of events that showcase arts from the Far North Queensland region and celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander culture! @cairnsindigenousartfair @CIAFcairns #CIAFcairns
Venue: Cairns Cruise Liner Terminal
Address: Cairns
Date: 15th - 17th July
Time: From 6:30pm 15th July until 17th July
Ticket: Fair is free with individual ticketed events
Buy / Ticket: http://www.ciaf.localtickets.com.au
Web: http://ciaf.com.au
: https://www.facebook.com/CIAFcairns/?fref=ts
: https://twitter.com/CIAFcairns
: https://www.instagram.com/cairnsindigenousartfair/
: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiZSTzHsmtRZzEzNZ-MKwsw
Address: Cairns
Date: 15th - 17th July
Time: From 6:30pm 15th July until 17th July
Ticket: Fair is free with individual ticketed events
Buy / Ticket: http://www.ciaf.localtickets.com.au
Web: http://ciaf.com.au
: https://www.facebook.com/CIAFcairns/?fref=ts
: https://twitter.com/CIAFcairns
: https://www.instagram.com/cairnsindigenousartfair/
: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiZSTzHsmtRZzEzNZ-MKwsw
The Cairns Indigenous Art Fair (CIAF) has launched their 2016 program and event app!
Welcoming crowds of more than 50,000 visitors last year, CIAF 2016 is set to be bigger and better than ever and will kick off at a spectacular Opening Night event, Thurs14 July and continuing through the following three days, 15 -17 July.
CIAF is the ultimate platform for Queensland Indigenous artists to tell their stories and is an ethical point of sale for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. Over three days it offers those who visit a unique opportunity to experience Indigenous culture, through a wonderful diversity of mediums.
Featuring more than 100 artists and some of Queensland's most renowned Indigenous artists from remote art communities, including those from Mornington Island, Lockhart River and Pormpuraaw, along with local Cairns galleries and national commercial galleries.
The spectacular art fair, that features a daily program of dance and musical performance, a bustling art market and a curated art exhibition, also hosts the Cairns premiere of Spear, a film by Stephen Page, and a collection of archival films depicting Queensland Indigenous culture of past decades.
Harding has created a broad ranging program, designed to engage those at every level of interest in indigenous art and culture. CIAF 2016 offers a range of singular events, from a fresh take on the hugely popular art fashion performance that sold out last year, to a new social initiative focused on the art of Queensland Indigenous prison inmates, in an exhibition entitled Freedom of Expression.
Harding is also working with community-based art centres under a theme for this year's curated collection entitled Cultural Bliss; a survey of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander happiness.
Harding says viewers will be able to enjoy a different understanding of the artists and their work and what defines their country and community.
Communities work like a central business district where culture is practiced, where stories are passed down and where people connect to family and interaction is the focus.
"Culture and community are not a lifestyle choice. It an expression of who the artists are," the artistic director says.
Harding explains that artists are asked to draw inspiration from all the elements of living in community, to reveal a life that is complex, buoyant, meaningful and fun.
"As First Peoples, adversity should not challenge strength and pride. On country, with family - this is Cultural Bliss."
Art curator, Hetti Perkins, coordinates the 2016 Collectors and Curators program, exclusively tailored for invited participants. The program hosts representatives from private collections, major art galleries and institutions from Australia and around the world to view and buy the work of renowned Queensland artists, including Christian Thompson, Mavis Ngallametta, Rosella Namok and Fiona Omeenyo and a host of emerging artists, who will exhibit at CIAF 2016. CIAF 2016 has to date attracted interest from national and international art institutions, including the New York Metropolitan Museum.
Welcoming crowds of more than 50,000 visitors last year, CIAF 2016 is set to be bigger and better than ever and will kick off at a spectacular Opening Night event, Thurs14 July and continuing through the following three days, 15 -17 July.
CIAF is the ultimate platform for Queensland Indigenous artists to tell their stories and is an ethical point of sale for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. Over three days it offers those who visit a unique opportunity to experience Indigenous culture, through a wonderful diversity of mediums.
Featuring more than 100 artists and some of Queensland's most renowned Indigenous artists from remote art communities, including those from Mornington Island, Lockhart River and Pormpuraaw, along with local Cairns galleries and national commercial galleries.
The spectacular art fair, that features a daily program of dance and musical performance, a bustling art market and a curated art exhibition, also hosts the Cairns premiere of Spear, a film by Stephen Page, and a collection of archival films depicting Queensland Indigenous culture of past decades.
Harding has created a broad ranging program, designed to engage those at every level of interest in indigenous art and culture. CIAF 2016 offers a range of singular events, from a fresh take on the hugely popular art fashion performance that sold out last year, to a new social initiative focused on the art of Queensland Indigenous prison inmates, in an exhibition entitled Freedom of Expression.
Harding is also working with community-based art centres under a theme for this year's curated collection entitled Cultural Bliss; a survey of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander happiness.
Harding says viewers will be able to enjoy a different understanding of the artists and their work and what defines their country and community.
Communities work like a central business district where culture is practiced, where stories are passed down and where people connect to family and interaction is the focus.
"Culture and community are not a lifestyle choice. It an expression of who the artists are," the artistic director says.
Harding explains that artists are asked to draw inspiration from all the elements of living in community, to reveal a life that is complex, buoyant, meaningful and fun.
"As First Peoples, adversity should not challenge strength and pride. On country, with family - this is Cultural Bliss."
Art curator, Hetti Perkins, coordinates the 2016 Collectors and Curators program, exclusively tailored for invited participants. The program hosts representatives from private collections, major art galleries and institutions from Australia and around the world to view and buy the work of renowned Queensland artists, including Christian Thompson, Mavis Ngallametta, Rosella Namok and Fiona Omeenyo and a host of emerging artists, who will exhibit at CIAF 2016. CIAF 2016 has to date attracted interest from national and international art institutions, including the New York Metropolitan Museum.