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A collection of Yolngu artworks in the exhibition space.
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Chau Chak Wing Museum wins three national museum awards

10 June 2021
Best Indigenous project and two design awards
The Chau Chak Wing Museum has received the Museums & Galleries National Award for its Yolŋu Indigenous Project and two Museums Australasia Multimedia & Publication Design Awards.

The Chau Chak Wing Museum was announced as the winner of the three national awards at the Australian Museums and Galleries AssociationÌýNational Conference 2021 in Canberra, on Wednesday 9 June.Ìý

Indigenous Project

The (MAGNA) for best Indigenous Project encompassed extensive community consultation, the production of a co-curated exhibitionÌýGululu dhuwala djalkiri: welcome to the YolÅ‹u foundationsÌýand an associated multi-authored book, .Ìý

Gululu dhuwala djalkiri: welcome to the YolÅ‹u foundationsÌýis the first show presented in the Chau Chak Wing MuseumÌýlargest exhibition space, the 420 square metre Ian Potter Gallery. ItÌýfeaturesÌý350 artworks from the University of Sydney's collections and was created in collaboration with communities in eastern Arnhem Land.Ìý

Director David Ellis accepted the awards on behalf of exhibition curators Rebecca Conway and Matt Poll, our museum team and the three collaborating YolÅ‹u communities represented through Milingimbi Art and Culture, Buku-LarrÅ‹gay Mulka Centre - Yirrkala, and Bula’bula Arts - Ramingining, as well as linguists in the YolÅ‹u Studies Unit, Charles Darwin University.Ìý

On receiving the award, Rebecca Conway explained "we were guided throughout by YolÅ‹u social and philosophical concepts,Ìýand the exhibition design, layout and interpretation strategies were led by YolÅ‹u". She continued,Ìý

Throughout the exhibition development and book production we worked to the idea that the process and the relationship are as important as the final product.
Rebecca Conway, Curator

Director David Ellis said, "YolÅ‹u people have worked with the University of Sydney since the 1920s in Arnhem Land and from the 1970s in Sydney and this major project is the culmination of years of community-led research and collaboration. We are thrilled to have this significant achievement acknowledged with a national award".Ìý

The project began on Country with curators Rebecca Conway and Matt Poll visiting the three communities in 2017. The following year a project team ofÌýYolÅ‹u elders and artists visited the University of Sydney to view the artworks in the collection and make key decisions about selection of artworks and design development. YolÅ‹u were paid as expert consultants andÌýnew work was acquired from each of the collaborating art centres.ÌýThe result is a culturally meaningful and visually spectacular exhibition and a book thatÌýexplores how the relationship between communities and museums has changed over time.ÌýÌýÌý

The Chau Chak Wing MuseumÌýwas also Highly Commended for TheÌýMummy Room,Ìýin theÌýPermanent Exhibition category. Another exhibition,ÌýObject / Art / Specimen,Ìýwas shortlistedÌýin theÌýTemporary Exhibition category. A full list of award winners can be .Ìý


Design awardsÌý

The Chau Chak Wing Museum also received aÌýMuseums Australasia Multimedia & Publication Design Award (MAPDA) for its new branding and opening invitation.Ìý

Visual identity and branding

Identity and branding

The Chau Chak Wing Museum is not just a new museum, but a uniting of three existing institutions and thousands of years of human history. The visual identity for the Museum needed to reflect the historical significance of the collections while representing a contemporary museum with a playful personality. University of Sydney graphic designer Katie Sorrenson said, "The identity I developed has two core elements, the primary typeface and a distinctive photographic style". She continued, "The typeface, which is useÌýgraphically across the identity, is a contemporary serif which references the historical mark of the chisel. The photographic style, developed with in-house photographers Louise Cooper and Stefanie Zingsheim, brought to life hero collection items through dramatic lighting and textured surfaces".Ìý

Invitiation folded and unfolded

Invitation

The invitation to the opening of the Chau Chak Wing Museum needed to express the once-in-a-lifetime nature of launching this purpose-built space at the University of Sydney. Designer Katie Sorrenson said, "The Museum’s tagline is ‘find the unexpected’ so the design process began with the concept of a reveal. TheÌýfinal origami-like invitation unfolds to become a kind of paper sculpture, with its many panels featuring stunning imagery from across the Museum’s broad collections".Ìý

The Chau Chak Wing Museum was also Highly Commended for its film and Muse Magazine, Issue 26.

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