Having heard so many stories of Aborginal artists ripped off by galleries, my suspicions are eased by the detailed info provided with pieces in Ochre.
Many of the arts & crafts come with information on the artists - even some lovely wooden bracelets had photos and 'design owned by' material with them. You see the words 'Aboriginal owned art centres' all over the place as sources for the artworks, so you can be sure that you're supporting the artists, not merely some exploitative middleman. The very visibility of this info quietens the nervous flutters, and makes a change from some of the more dodgy city galleries.
And the work itself! Surely no-one needs to be sold on the seeing-through time experience of staring at a real piece of Indigenous artistry. Works on paper, bark, weaving, jewellery, carving, even dolls named in language and translated for your own little one - there's a bit of everything in here.
The staffer who was on duty the other day was quietly efficient, and I had a lovely browse through the books, music and art on offer. There's even books for the kids (something you don't see often enough in most bookshops) and there was one artwork I felt if I looked into long enough, it might just spirit me away. read more