Meyers
Place

Emma Donovan & The PutbacksAretha Brown
  • “PEACE”

    The first panel shows a mother and her Bub. This panel represents pre-cook Australia. Where we looked after lore and our waterways in a way that was sustainable that kept our country healthy for tens of thousands of years.

  • “COLONY”

    The second, is about the first contact. I always think about the mob who would have first seen the endeavor and first fleet roll into Botany Bay only 230 years ago. What they would have been thinking, and how alien the first British colonizers would have seemed. I think coming out of lockdown and reflecting on COVID, thinking about how easily disease would have spread during the early colonial contact. The spread of disease is an act of warfare, especially against indigenous peoples.

  • “STRUGGLE”

    The third panel is about struggle. About being constantly policed, ridiculed, and worked. First Nations people are so hard-working, but we have never seen the financial gain for all the work we have done. My grandma was stolen generation and worked for years as a glorified slave, paid virtually nothing, and bettered the lives of another white family. I am affected by history today. It's in my veins and it informs everything I do.

  • 80% of Aboriginal people actually live in our cities and regional parts of our country. This is despite the consistent narrative played out by our Murdoch-controlled media, that loves to paint us as all being desert mob who live in remote communities. This idea is problematic because it denies our modernity, complexity, and survival.

  • “TODAY”

    The last panel is about the blak experience today. It feels like the city, it feels like displacement and like pollution. This represents to me, how I relate to the notion of living in a developed city and how that translates to my notion of “country”. I don’t draw native trees because I don’t see them, I don’t draw native animals because where I live all I see are neighborhood dogs and maybe the odd possum. What country means to me, probably differs from Mob who live in more regional areas, but my reality is in no way less real. Every Aboriginal person’s experience navigating life within our colony is valid and important.

1/5

Before & After

Slide
to reveal
Music

Emma Donovan & The Putbacks – Under These Streets

Under These Streets is out now digitally and on limited edition vinyl via Heavy Machinery Records. Cover art by Aretha Brown.

Visit Meyers Place

Accessibility
  • This location and/or event is easily accessible for persons who are hard of sight.