NGV Presents the Inaugural Indigenous Fashion Commission

In a brand-new initiative, the NGV will present the inaugural Indigenous Fashion Commission, celebrating extraordinary fashion and design in Australia by commissioning a designer to produce an ambitious new work for the NGV Collection. Debuting at the NGV Gala in December 2022, the Commission celebrates the innovation, diversity and creativity of First Nations design practices.

This year’s commission is a collaboration between Yuwaalaraay woman Julie Shaw, Founder and Creative Director of MAARA Collective, and master YolÅ‹u weavers Evonne Munuyngu, Lisa Gurrulpa, Serena Gubuyani, Mary Dhapalany and Margaret Malibirr from Bula’bula Arts. In June 2022, Shaw travelled to Ramingining in Northeast Arnhem Land, where the artists together created the bodice for the gown using hand-dyed and woven pandanus fibres. Artists from Ramingining have been working with natural fibres to create conical mats, mindirr (dilly bags) and djerrk (bush string bags) for thousands of years. Combining Shaw’s vision for storytelling with the artist’s intricate weaving practices, the voluminous couture gown is their most ambitious work to date.

Made possible with a significant philanthropic grant from NGV Trustee and Foundation Board Member Krystyna Campbell-Pretty AM and family, each commission is acquisitive, entering the NGVs growing Collection of Fashion and Textiles. The Indigenous Fashion Commission acknowledges the important contribution First Nations designers make to contemporary fashion in Australia and will help enable the NGV to broaden its collection in new and exciting ways.

Tony Ellwood AM, Director, NGV, said: Thanks to the remarkable generosity of Krystyna Campbell-Pretty, the NGV is honoured to present the Indigenous Fashion Commission and strengthen our representation of Indigenous designers in the NGV Collection. This exceptional gown by Julie Shaw and the weavers at Bula’bula Arts is awe-inspiring and embodies a beautiful intersection between high fashion and cultural craftsmanship.’

Julie Shaw, Designer, said: ‘My vision was for this couture-style dress to be inherently Australian and to hold the influences and craftsmanship of Indigenous artists. For this project, I see the weavers as the couturiers, and Country as their atelier.’

The 2022 Indigenous Fashion Commission will debut at the NGV Gala, a celebration of art and fashion, on Saturday 10 December 2022 and be worn by Awabakal model Charlee Fraser.

The Indigenous Fashion Commission will be on display from 21 December 2022 at NGV International. Free entry.

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