Jumat, 04 Juni 2021

First Nations fashion designers make history at Australian Fashion Week - ABC News

For the first time in its 25-year history, the internationally acclaimed fashion event — Australian Fashion Week — opened with a 65,000-year-old custom: a Welcome to Country and smoking ceremony by the Gadigal people.

It was made even more special by a performance by the Muggera dance troupe and First Nations Fashion and Design (FNFD) all-Indigenous fashion showcase curated by Cairns-based Meriam Mer woman Grace Lillian Lee.

"Our team is standing on the shoulders of many that have gone before us in building up the industry," Ms Lee, founder of Indigenous advocacy group First Nations Fashion and Design (FNFD), said.

Grace wears a bright orange accessory that she has weaved and sits beside a garment that sits on a dummy mothat she has weaved.
First Nations Fashion and Design founder Grace Lillian Lee with a garment she created for Australian Fashion Week and the Powerhouse Museum.(

ABC Far North: Carli Willis

)

'Self-determined, independent, Indigenous designers'

In another first, FNFD was the first Indigenous runway, led by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and starring an all-Indigenous cast at Australian Fashion Week.

"In regards to the Australian Fashion narrative, First Nations people and our country have been a great source of inspiration," Ms Lee said.

"It's time for us to take ownership of that and actually be a part of that conversation … create more economic opportunities for our own people so we can grow as an industry."

Esteemed Indigenous musicians William Barton, Electric Fields, and Drmngnow performed live as part of the groundbreaking runway performance at Carriageworks in Sydney.

"We've always been a part of other festivals and not really had a main-stage platform where we could really voice and celebrate who we are," Ms Lee said.

Indigenous man wears vibrant yellow sculptured garment made with weaving technique on fashion runway.
Indigenous model Luke Currie-Richardson wears Grace Lillian Lee's design at Australian Fashion Week.(

Supplied: Lucas Dawson

)

Ms Lee uses a traditional grasshopper weaving technique in a contemporary form to create her designs that she learned from esteemed artist and mentor Erub man Ken Thaiday.

One of the designs Ms Lee created for Australian Fashion Week is inspired by the eucalypt, as part of a commissioned exhibition Eucalyptusdom of First Nations artists at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney.

"My grandmother talks about where we all come from the same root and that we are all many branches of that tree," Ms Lee said.

"I just wanted to show the complexities, but that we are all united together in this one piece and come from this same great, great-grandmother."

Cheryl lounges in stylish bar wearing a black silk garment and a silver waist belt.
Cheryl Creed, Murri Quu Couture founder and designer.(

ABC Far North: Carli Willis

)

Fashions with a story attached

Originally from Cherbourg, Cairns-based designer Cheryl Creed is a Gunggari, Pitta-Pitta, Bindal and Quandamooka woman and the founder of fashion label Murrii Quu Couture.

Cheryl has showcased at various Fashion Week runways and was most recently the first Australian to be selected as one of 10 designers globally to take to the stage at Milan Fashion Week at the Emerging Talents stage.

"I didn't expect to go there, not in my wildest dreams, that was just like for somebody else, I never had a thought that I would be there," said Ms Creed said.

"Indigenous designers and fashion, we're starting to be seen on a lot of the runways … not just in Australia but around the world.

Ms Creed's story is both sobering and humbling as she explains how she recycles garments from op-shops — a skill born out of poverty.

As a child, her family would spend a lot of time in op-shops and eventually it became a treat to shop the discarded garments that she began to collect.

Indigenous model wears extravagant all-black dress on the fashion runway.
Indigenous model Perry Mooney wears Murri Quu Couture at Australian Fashion Week.(

Supplied: Lucas Dawson

)

"With the collecting of the clothes, pulling them apart and putting them back together again … I refer to my way of doing things as assimilated fashion," she said.

"It reminds me of when they moved us all around and split up our families and then, under that assimilation process, tried to make a new us.

"Assimilation is not a word that we like to use … in terms of my design it's taking that negative and recreating."

Ms Creed's design depicts eucalyptus trees and how they were affected in the bushfires and is also part of the Eucalyptusdom exhibition.

Indigenous designer Briana stands between two Indigenous models wearing bright pink, purple, yellow and blue fashion garments.
Briana Enoch stands between Indigenous models Gillyba Ambrum (left) and Mary Sheppard who wear designs from her Quandamooka Collection.(

ABC Far North: Carli Willis

)

Fashions tell a story

Briana Enoch is a Kaantju and Quandamooka woman and founder of Jawawee, a design label that started out as handpainted accessories.

In September 2020, Ms Enoch decided to follow her dream and release a high-end clothing collection, and it was not long after that she got the call form Ms Lee to join the First Nations Fashion and Design runway at Australian Fashion Week.

"I was really excited to hear that she wanted us to be a part of a special Welcome to Country at the Afterpay Australian Fashion Week and I designed my first couture dress," she said.

"I'm so excited to see it on the runway.

Indigenous model wears vibrant bright couture dress that is blue, pink, purple and yellow on the fashion runway.
Indigenous model Lisa Fatnowna wears a Jarawee design at Australian Fashion Week for First Nations Fashion and Design runway.(

Supplied: Lucas Dawson

)

The dress premiered at Australian Fashion Week and will now exhibit at the Powerhouse Museum for a year, telling a story about how her people used the eucalyptus.

Ms Enoch explained the many uses including using leaves to whack away mosquitoes, for medicinal purposes, and traditional cultural practices like smoking ceremonies.

"Our people were really big on making sure that we had plenty of eucalyptus trees on the island [Stradbroke Island in south-east Queensland]," she said.

"It's amazing how our old people have told us stories and they pass that on and we can infuse that into different mediums of the fashion."

Lynelle stands in front of Eucalyptus trees wearing a white and blue patterned top.
Sown In Time founder Lynelle Flynders.(

ABC Far North: Carli Willis

)

'Everybody needs to come together as one'

Lynelle Flynders has been part of the FNFD movement since it began in 2013, when she first met Ms Lee at a textile symposium at the Cairns Indigenous Art Fair.

"So this platform (FNFD) was starting out," she said.

"It was, 'What does Indigenous fashion look like? Not, 'What does mainstream look like on you?'.

"How do you see fashion from an Indigenous perspective?"

Ms Flynders is an art teacher, but with encouragement from Ms Lee entered the fashion space and has since founded her label Sown In Time.

When she designs a garment, she imagines it on her daughter and if she cannot imagine it on her she will not do it.

"It's a lot of research and practice, a lot of swearing and throwing things away, stuff like that."

Lisa wears white long shirt and long short combination. White garments have red paint on them.
Indigenous model Lisa Fatnowna wears Sown In Time at First Nations Fashion and Design runway at Australian Fashion Week.(

Supplied: Lucas Dawson

)

For her collection that took to that stage at Australian Fashion week, the fabrics were all handpainted making every inch of the design unique.

Ms Flynders does not think of herself as a fashion designer, but is drawn to the FNFD movement and wants to keep going and bring as many mobs along as possible.

"When you're in one of Grace's performances, you're family, you're one and everybody needs to come together as one and go forward and that's what makes it beautiful."

First  Nations models and designers all dressed colourfully gathered and are laughing and smiling.
The First Nations Fashion and Design team behind the scenes.(

Supplied: Lucas Dawson

)

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiVWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFiYy5uZXQuYXUvbmV3cy8yMDIxLTA2LTA1L2hpc3RvcmljLWluZGlnZW5vdXMtZmFzaGlvbi1zaG93Y2FzZS8xMDAxOTE5OTDSAShodHRwczovL2FtcC5hYmMubmV0LmF1L2FydGljbGUvMTAwMTkxOTkw?oc=5

2021-06-05 02:15:50Z
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