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  • 6 days ago
Co-curator Kat Kitch speaks about a special part of the Bungambrawatha: Stories of Albury.
Transcript
00:00So my name is Kat, I'm the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander curator, also
00:04known as the First Nations curator. What we have here today is a bunch load of
00:09different soil samples all taken from all different places in Australia that
00:14were collected by First Nations Albury community members to kind of show where
00:18they came from and how they got here as well. There was all these wonderful
00:23stories of how they came here during the resettlement scheme, the different
00:28stories that came from that about like how some of the families absolutely
00:31thrived but how some of them didn't, much similar to a lot of the Bonnet-Gillers
00:35stories that we hear as well. And the amount of effort it took because
00:39originally these soil samples were in a set of drawers and you wouldn't inherently
00:43go into a museum and think to open drawers so we decided to put it up on the
00:47wall and we had to get this panel particularly made with the holes cut out
00:52of it, the soil samples taken out of the drawer, put into the containers, sealed and
00:57then attached the panel and then attached the soil samples to the wall behind the
01:02panel. It was a whole deal and having to write like the words that go with this
01:06panel as well as the words that go with the resettlement scheme and the rest of
01:10the panels in here, getting those looked at by the Deer-Malunga-Bang group as
01:14well, the Raghurri elders group, to make sure that what was being said was both
01:18factual and also had the voice of community in it. And of course we added the
01:23Goenna Inn as well being the totem for the Raghurri people in Albury. Oh yeah
01:28so my background is actually in archaeology not museum so getting to
01:32handle these soil samples and going like oh like the the redness in the Alice
01:38Springs compared to like the darkness of Mount Pilate compared to like the
01:42grittiness of Dural Day? I haven't gotten the town names down correctly as well as
01:49like the smoothness from the Mung Marino Reserve. So it was so interesting to look
01:54at that and with my archaeology knowledge behind me and environmental
01:59science knowledge behind me being able to go like oh you know what would thrive in
02:03like this kind of soil like nice sandy soil and all these trees you probably
02:06would have seen it in this area. It was a lot of fun.

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