VICTORIAN FIRST PEOPLES ART & DESIGN FAIR SHOWCASE

In 2025 Melbourne Art Fair welcomed the showcase exhibition of the Victorian First Peoples Art and Design Fair, featuring the work of 20 independent Victorian First Peoples artists, along with Baluk Arts, Kaiela Arts, Perridak Arts and The Torch.

An initiative of the Victorian Government’s Creative State strategy and driven by the Creative Victoria First Peoples Directions Circle, the Victorian First Peoples Art and Design Fair aims to promote and build the market for the extraordinary work of Victoria’s First People creatives.

Discover participating art centres and artists below. 

Moorina Bonini, Untitled (re-marking), 2019, calico, charcoal, wattle sap, digital scanning, 100 x 150 cm.

Independent Artists

The Victorian First People’s Art & Design Fair will shine a light on the diverse and rich creative practices and culture of First Peoples throughout Victoria, while engaging the broader Victorian community and delivering economic benefits to First Peoples creatives, enabling the artists and designers to expand their business practices, platform new ideas and bold new works, and strengthen the First Peoples creative industries here in Victoria.

As part of the 2025 exhibition showcase at Melbourne Art Fair, the work of 20 independent First Nations artists were exhibited. Featured artists:

Moorina Bonini (Yorta Yorta, Wurundjeri, Wiradjuri)
Lorraine Brigdale (Yorta Yorta)
Glennys Briggs (Yorta Yorta, Taungurung, Wiradjuri)
Janet Bromley (Yorta Yorta)
Bradley Brown (Gunditjmara, Gunai Kurnai, Bidawal)
Trina Dalton-Oogjes (Wadawurrung/Wathaurung, Gunditjmara)
Talgium Edwards (Taungurong, Yorta Yorta, Muthi Muthi, Boonwerung and Palawa)
Deanne Gilson (Wadawurrung)
Tammy Gilson (Wadawurrung)
ENOKi (Dja Dja Wurrung, Yorta Yorta)
Gail Harradine (Wotjobaluk, Djubagalk, Jadawadjali)
Kelly Koumalatsos (Wergaia, Wamba Wamba)
Glenda Nicholls (Waddi Waddi, Ngarrindjeri, Yorta Yorta)
Ray Thomas (Gunnai)
Aunty Zeta Thomson (Wurundjeri, Yorta Yorta, Wemba Wemba, Wuradjeri)
Aunty Kim Wandin (Wurundjeri)
Lewis Wandin-Bursill (Wurundjeri)
Peter Waples-Crowe (Ngarigo)
Lisa Waup (Gunditjmara, Torres Strait)
Walter Saunders (Dhauwurd Wurrung) 
Kellie Frankland-Saunders (Dhauwurd Wurrung) 
Christine Pearce (Dhauwurd Wurrung) 
All Kilcarer and Gilga Gunditj (Dhauwurd Wurrung) 
Gunditjmara Original Custodians 

VFPADF COMMISSION 
Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung, Barkandji) 

https://melbourneartfair.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Deanne-Gilson-Kunuwarra-Ngarrimili-Me-Dancing-the-Black-Swan-Dance-at-Murrup-Laarr-our-stone-circle-gathering-place-2022_Photo-by-Andrew-Wilson.jpg Deanne Gilson, Kunuwarra Ngarrimili (Me, Dancing the Black Swan Dance at Murrup Laarr, our stone circle gathering place), 2022, yellow and red ochre, charcoal and acrylic on linen, 65 x 65cm. Photo by Andrew Wilson. Art Gallery of Ballarat.

VFPADF Commission

The inaugural VFPADF Commission has been awarded to Mitch Mahoney (Boon Wurrung, Barkindji) and premiered at Melbourne Art Fair 2025.

Mitch Mahoney

Born 1997 on Ladji Ladji Country in Mildura VIC 
Lives and works on Wonnarua Country in Hunter Valley NSW 

Born in North-West Victoria along the banks of the Murray River, Mitch Mahoney is a Boonwurrung/Barkindji artist who grew up in Mildura and the Hunter Valley.  He currently splits his time between Melbourne and regional NSW. As a multidisciplinary artist, Mitch focuses on the revitalisation of South-Eastern Aboriginal practices, creating cultural items such as possum skin cloaks, traditional stringy bark and red gum canoes, and kangaroo tooth necklaces.  He also specialises in line drawings and South-Eastern Aboriginal design.  His art reflects his Country and the natural connection he feels to all that it supports, creates and provides, and the ever-changing influence it has on him.  

Gurnbak (Goodoo, Mulloway, Long tail), 2024-25

This work speaks to three distinct fish and their importance on Country, Goodoo the Murray Cod (freshwater), Mulloway (estuary), and Longtail Tuna (saltwater). These fish, as apex predators in their respective ecosystems, are vital indicators of environmental health and carry cultural and ecological significance. The methods of acquisition emphasize diverse human interactions with fishing: the Murray Cod, sourced from a fish farm, talks about the importance of conserving wild populations; the Longtail Tuna, caught personally, reflects time spent on Country, learning about the waterways and seasons; and the Mulloway, purchased from commercial fisheries, highlights the complexities of large-scale operations. Each method brings unique insights and challenges, sparking conversations about ethical fishing, sustainable resource management, and the ways we connect with Country. The work ultimately underscores the interconnectedness of Country, ecological balance, and human responsibility. 

Image courtesy Mitch Mahoney and Vivien Anderson Gallery (Naarm/Melbourne).

VIDEO Program

Moorina Bonini (Wurundjeri, Yorta Yorta)
Gowidja (After), 2021
video, 7:30 minutes
Courtesy the artist.

Jarra Karalinar Steel (Boon Wurrung, Wemba Wemba, Trawlwoolway)
Baanyabeel (Allambee biik baany), Tidal Volume – call and response, 2021
Single channel digital video, 2:02 minutes
Commissioned by Footscray Community Arts Centre.
Courtesy the artist.

WARREENY, Tidal Volume – call and response, 2021
Single channel digital video, 2:05 minutes
Commissioned by Footscray Community Arts Centre.
Courtesy the artist.

Yaluk-ut Weelam, Tidal Volume – call and response, 2021
Single channel digital video, 2:08 minutes
Commissioned by Footscray Community Arts Centre.
Courtesy the artist.

ENOKi (Dja Dja Wurrung, Yorta Yorta) and Bby J (Ngiyampaa)
Blak Neon Future, 2023
digital 3D animation, 2 minutes
Commissioned by Yirramboi.
Courtesy the artists.

Djirri Djirri Wurundjeri Women’s Dance Group (Wurundjeri Country)
Wominjeka / Welcome Video, 2018-20
single channel video, 2:26 minutes
Videography: Ryan Tews
Courtesy the artists.

Steven Rhall (Taungurung)
Better Call Rhall Artist Services, 2024
MP4, 1080p, stereo sound, 0:58 minutes
Courtesy the artist.

Rhall as Chris Burden Commercials, 2020
MP4, 480p, stereo sound, 1:52 minutes
Courtesy the artist.

Peter Waples-Crowe (Ngarigo) and Rhian Hinkley
NGAYA (I AM), 2022
Single channel video, 5:04 minutes
Commissioned by Australian Centre of the Moving Image
Courtesy the artist.

Peter Waples-Crowe (Ngarigo) and Rhian Hinkley NGAYA (I AM), video still, Commissioned by Australian Centre of the Moving Image. Courtesy the artist.