The Projects
Welcome to our Projects Page, where we invite you to explore our projects and pitch your own.
Are you holding an idea for a book, film, mural, music piece a gathering or something entirely new that can bring us back into right relation?
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Through rich storytelling and evocative illustrations, this book invites families to reclaim space, to slow down, listen, and reconnect with the wisdom held deep in the red centre of Australia. Created in collaboration with storyteller Beryl Webber, this book is a celebration of sharing knowledge and discovering the powerful stories the land holds. It's perfect for children, parents, grandparents, educator anyone ready to sit by the fire of memory and imagination. A series of vibrant A1 poster prints, drawn from the pages of Desert Song are also available to bring the spirit of the story into your home. Buy the book. Share the prints. Pass the story on. Because when this ancient land sings with life, we all have a part in the chorus.



Describe your image

This collection is more than art. It’s a representation of encounters between land and spirit, story and systems, resistance and renewal. These works emerged from deep listening to landscapes of knowledge, to ancestors’ whispers, to the ever-shifting interface of what it means to be in relation. These are not just paintings, they are offerings. Maps. Questions to explore. Codes for re-patterning the ways we relate in a time when the economy of attention is fractured and exploited, this is an invitation to redirect it. To root it in care, in kinship, in curiosity. These stories represents boundary pushing. They are activations, notes to seed your own sense-making, for your own inquiries into healing, belonging, and relation. A download of sorts, acts of ancestral resistance and acts of survival through landscapes of hidden truths and concentrated power.




Love Magic is an anthology, an exhibition, and an animation project. It is also a gentle and mischievous revolt against the flattening of erotic expression and the commodification of Indigenous bodies, cultures, and spiritualities. Instead, it opens a portal into the sacred and playful architectures of kinship, consent, and ecstatic reciprocity.
This is not a "collection" in the capitalist sense. It is a convergence. A memory. It is kin-making between flesh and story, between sovereignty and seduction. This project is shaping in collaboration with Dr Tyson Yunkaporta, of the Apalech clan and founder of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems Lab Australia. He is a carver, poet, scholar, and translator of complexity. His work dissects and dreams the codes that bind us and break us from a uniquely Indigenous lens.



