Main Menu
• Shortened Link: W23.link » CreativityAlliance.com
• Beat the Censors on Social Media with ᵂ23 ᴰᴼᵀ ᴸᴵᴺᴷ
• Free @Rev.JoelDufresne P.O.W. USA - Prison Martyr - Bogus Charges
• Free @JamesCostello P.O.W. UK - 5 Years for Anti-Immigration Stickers
Bitcoin/BTC
Bitcoin/BTC Address:
3GyxbqYH3Hg6dpxVvS6PkFZ5FGbX1FLZ5N

US Dollar Coin/USDC
US Dollar Coin/USDC Address:
0xd5fffA0E8e5285Ee011c2D0404FFE7C6b867033d
Don't be a Jew - Donate Today

Meet Australian Aborigines

Started by Rev.Cambeul, Wed 11 Mar 2020

Previous topic - Next topic

Rev.Cambeul

#114
... Last post from previous page
Aboriginal Art is a FRAUD Created by the White Man

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Geffrey+Bardon+1971+Dot+Painting

Quote from: Abo Bullshit ProfiteersIs it disrespectful to do Aboriginal dot painting?
Dot painting remains a sacred art form for the Aboriginal people. Only certain artists from certain nations are permitted to produce this kind of art. Though there are numerous workshops around the country where one can learn more about this incredible art form, it is still considered disrespectful for non-Indigenous people to produce this kind of art. Aboriginal dot painting is a part of the Indigenous culture therefore, like many cultures around the world, it would be considered inappropriate for those who are not a part of the culture to reproduce something that is so deeply connected.



A White kid in a kindergarten could have done it ...
But you can buy it from Abo fraudsters for just $8K

https://ozbidauctions.auctionserver.net/m/view-auctions/catalog/id/463

Whitefella Geoffrey Bardon gave 'Dot' painting to 'Aboriginal Race' in 1971

By Maria Rigoni | mariarigoni.com.au | April 2023

https://mariarigoni.com.au/2023/04/whitefella-geoffrey-bardon-gave-dot-painting-to-aboriginal-race-in-1971


In a government settlement town of Papunya in Australia's Western Desert, in the very wet year of 1971 'Aboriginal Race' Dot painting originated. 52 years ago. This art style has no ancient cultural heritage no matter how many people try to dispute this romantic truth.

Papunya Tula is a small hill to the north of the town and a site of honey ant dreaming. It is also the name of the Company set up by whitefella, Geoffrey Bardon, with a government arts and crafts grant. A government grant given to assist the local natives manage the process and collect and distribute the money they received from selling their artwork.

Papunya was founded as a local native government settlement in 1957. A bore was drilled, and basic housing was built by the government to provide a place for the rising numbers of local natives in existing missions and reserves to move to. Access to clean running water, regular food supplies, clothes, bedding, basic housing and motor cars made them mindbogglingly prosperous compared to their previous nomadic hunter gather lifestyle.

Many of the nomadic local natives at that time were born at undisclosed locations in an unknown year. The hunter gatherer lifestyle found these people living an exceedingly perilous existence in a tremendously harsh desert environment. These people took voluntarily refuge offered by the government to escape from the burdens of life living the old way in the Western Desert.

Lutherans from Hermannsburg also came. The notion that this settlement was set up for the convenience of government to 'subjugate' and 'assimilate' these local natives is pure nonsense.

About 1400 local natives from different desert clans, including Pintupi, Luritja, Walpiri, Arrernte, and Anmatyerre at the time were being introduced into the emerging English speaking Australian society's way of life. An immense barrier was the number and variety of local native languages spoken. A volatile mix making a volatile town.

Geoffrey Bardon was born of a pure whitefella genealogy in Randwick, Sydney in 1940. He studied law at a Sydney university and before graduating he changed career direction and obtained an art education degree from Sydney National Art School in 1965. After graduating as an art teacher he worked in country New South Wales and Darwin. He had a desire to make a difference, to make films and produce high quality still photographs. He stated that he was not a businessman, teaching and art were his specialty.

In February 1971, Geoffrey Bardon a 30 year old blue eyed, tall man with unruly blond hair and an open mind, travelled along a 250 kilometre highway and crude red dirt road northwest from Alice Springs to the troubled government settlement at Papunya to take up the position of art teacher. With his rabbit trap and tool kit he was confident he could make the world his own. In his mind he was being paid like a millionaire to teach children in rags art.

Geoffrey Bardon was a sensitive, respectful, and kind man who took his 16 mm film camera and other expensive photographic equipment to Papunya with him. He was an artist and described Papunya as a hidden place unknown on maps and considered by officials as a problem place, a community in distress, struggling for survival with disruption, confusion, and despair.

Oppressed Papunya was a place of emotional loss and waste. Geoffrey Bardon observed that the settlement staff consisted of many men displaying little compassion and clearly not interested in helping the settlement residents.

Sometimes odd things would happen which he could see confused the residents. Like he watched 'aboriginal' men watering plants without an understanding of why and others chopping firewood then stacking it on the veranda of the settlement manager's abode to provide wood for European fires of the winter time.

The chronic problem in the settlement Geoffrey Bardon saw was there was nothing much to do and people were bored.

While teaching he observed children sitting in the sand drawing shapes and making tracks of dogs, and kangaroo with their knuckles and fingers. He noticed whilst the local native men were telling stories they would draw symbols and animal tracks in the sand. An art style realized before his eyes.

Within 18 months of his arrival Geoffrey Bardon's influence triggered the Western Desert art movement, said to be one of the greatest innovations in twentieth century art.

With his whole class in tow they would go out for bush walks or drive, often travelling over 100 miles around the local countryside in his powder blue Volkswagen combi van. Learning, having fun, and playing in and around the dams near iconic outback windmills with sound of metal creaking as the blades, ever so slowly, rotated around and around.

After work, out at the airstrip, Geoffrey Bardon would allow the local native men to learn to drive his combi van. Filming their efforts kangaroo hopping and juddering across the tarmac. He offered friendship and he was respected.

Geoffrey Bardon felt that it was a waste of time for the local native children to draw the whitefella cowboys and Indians when they had a drawing culture all of their own. He recognised a spiritual relationship drawn from the native children's imagination to their dreaming. He would get the children to draw something like a kangaroo then he would measure it like he did on a test. If he didn't like the art he he would throw it in the bin and ask for a second attempt. If he didn't like the second attempt he would throw it in the bin and ask his student for more. When the child drew a double kangaroo he liked it and the child was rewarded. Drawing on the blackboard he taught the children art patterns to incorporate in their drawings and as a result was called Mr Patterns.

Geoffrey Bardon encouraged his students to paint their traditional designs using whitefella materials. Six outdoor murals were painted on the school walls at Papunya in 1971. The first realist style mural was of a family group sitting in the foreground of Haasts Bluff. This mural was painted over. The teacher inspired the children to create a mural based on traditional dreaming. The murals sparked astonishing interest in the community.

The elder men said the children did not know the full meaning of the motifs they were drawing. They said secret/sacred elements had to be suppressed, omitted or disguised within the painting. Soon many of the 'elder' men were involved in planning and painting the other five murals. The honey ant mural was a legitimate blackfella cultural icon. A masterpiece in Western Desert art. The local native men would sit on the ground near the mural and sing the honey ant song. The Honey Ant mural was completed with terrific enthusiasm with no prompting or persuading required.

Today only pictures of the murals remain as the originals were painted over in 1974 during routine clean-up maintenance of the government school buildings.

The settlement residents were encouraged to paint their stories onto canvas, on boards, discarded tiles, building remnants, cardboard, fence palings and many other things lying around. Up to 30 men gathered daily in a 'fever of painting' to paint on other things as well. In the active tidy paint room floor tiles, sawed up tables, scraps of skirting boards, house paint, shoe polish were utilised.

Geoffrey Bardon marvelled at the beautiful world of poetic intensity that was in these local native men's mind. Water dreaming, bush tucker dreaming, wild tomato story, grasshopper story, travelling story, women's story, wallaby dreaming a universe being created before his eyes.

The original paintings done with the touch of fingers rendered the spiritual nexus of the artists dreaming. He thought the dreamtime story of what causes rain was very poetic. In the dreamtime the power of a man's voice that sings in a cave at night with a fire induces the rain. A lovely idea, not rational, and a very innocent thought.

Then the artworks were included for sale in the whitefella marketplaces, and the local natives earned whitefella money for the artwork they produced. This is an example of an inclusive society.

Geoffrey Bardon documented everything the artists did. He traced the designs and wrote names on the local native's work to keep a record of who did what. He took two photos and recorded the story of every painting. During 1971 he travelled to Alice Springs and sold the dot paintings to bring home to the Western Desert local native artists $1300- to $1,500- per fortnight. Some artists were very well paid for their painting and the artists echoed this was the first time 'whitefella society' had placed any kind of value on anything they had ever done.

The artists enjoyed painting and it kept them so busy it disrupted the system of work in the settlement. The manager of community said, 'my fella's should be chopping wood not painting with Geoff, the firewood was not on the veranda when it should have been'. The conflict created a mess. Something that was gratifying became a political battle.

Geoffrey Bardon's efforts were sabotaged. People tried to exploit the local native artists by offering cheap prices for their work to then sell them for higher profit, so the bureaucratic native administrators came to the rescue. This caused the regular fortnightly payments to the settlement residents to be delayed for six weeks.

All the artists who did such good work were not paid the full sale price or paid in a timely manner. The artists were charged costs out of the sell price for the paint and other equipment they used. There were questions about the gravy train material costs and administration of the artists money. The painters did not like not being paid properly for what was irrefutably theirs to sell and expressed anger at the betrayal shown by the whitefella authorities. At a meeting in mid-1972 the painters sat on the ground and chanted 'money, money, money'. This hurt Geoffrey Bardon deeply as he saw the local natives who were theoretically being raised up and restored again were being stepped on and crushed back into the earth by 'Aboriginal Race' bureaucracy.   

No regular pay made life very difficult for these artists, and they stopped producing artwork until they got their money. The pressure mounted on Geoffrey Bardon who had no friends to fall back on in the government blackfella administrate world. The situation was dicey and complicated, and he wore himself out trying to solve it. He ended up feeling paralysed and fragmented. A decision needed to be made and the status quo upset before things could move forward. He felt the situation was done and no amount of fighting, complaining, or scheming would change it.

Accused of drinking too much to denounce him Geoffrey Bardon felt pretty wrecked and psychologically broke.  After spending a couple of days lying down he realised the situation was beyond repair and the best thing he could do was leave. He had to go. Time to close the book, pull the swords out of his back, recover and move on. He took his valuables, that being his radio, coat, and boning knife and swapped them for paintings. He bought some paintings and loaded up his van and drove out of Papunya in a rage.

Geoffrey Bardon was so angry. He was so upset. He was so very sick. He had suffered a nervous breakdown and back in Sydney he was admitted to the notorious Chelmsford Private Hospital in Pennant Hills for Deep Sleep Therapy. His treatment included some electro-convulsive therapy which left him with permanent damage. Physically incapacitated for the rest of his life.   

A truth then, and now, is that within the 'Aboriginal Race' administration authorities an attitude is snuggled to ensure that the Australian local native genealogy is amplified as a living museum artifact and not part of a natural developing world.

An attitude designed to exploit history and resist any kind of substantive positive and lasting change for a certain selection of the Australian population. There is no desire for Australian mixed genealogy to be considered as mainstream humanness like English or European or Asian or African.

To pretend colonizers tried to make the 'Aboriginal Race' extinct by breeding them out goes against the grain of natural human copulation and reproduction.

First nations people of the 'Aboriginal Race' today are not the same genealogy as "those who arrived here first" as no one knows who did arrive here first and from where they came from or what they looked like, or if they stayed or died out.

Proud to be a born and breed 'Aussie' just the same as all other born and breed Australians, warts, and all.

So Jedda, and Ngarra, what is your disability under the social model of disability? We are part of the 'Aboriginal Race' sir!
Reverend Cailen Cambeul, P.M.E.
Church Administrator, Creativity Alliance
Church of Creativity South Australia
Box 7051, West Lakes, SA, Australia, 5021

Email: Admin@creativityalliance.com
Crypto Coin Details in Forum Profile

Noli Nothis Permittere Le Terere
The only way to prevent 1984 is 2323
Joining the Creativity Alliance is Free
https://creativityalliance.com/join


"In the beginning of a change, the patriot is a scarce man, brave, hated, and scorned.
When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot."
Mark Twain.


Br.IanVonTurpie

I found the older Abos educated on the mission to be better. The younger ones are a protected species that's out of control. No matter how good you are to them they see this as a weakness to take the pîss and get something off you for free.

They turn an Oasis into a Desert very quickly! Let's say when industries like:- Tourism, Energy and Mining are down. The main industry in some places is welfare! The more stuff these people wreck , the more work there is in construction and repairs.

If you want to be rich, go to an Abo zone  and be:- A Bottle Shop owner, a KFC manager, or a Glazier, or Auto Glazier.
The Price is Reich!

Find me on Stormfront as QueJumpingAfghan where I have been banned!
Formerly Based in the Northern Territory
Now in Adelaide, South Australia
The Whitest City in Australia
Click to see map of Australia
https://creativityalliance.com/join

Rev.Cambeul

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12333351/Gary-Johns-Voice-No-Aboriginal-land-preservation-zoo.html

Excerpt: A leading No campaigner and critic of the proposed Voice to Parliament likened the fight to protect traditional Indigenous land to 'preserving things in zoos'.

Former Labor MP Gary Johns delivered a speech for the Bennelong Society Conference in 2003 where he made the controversial remarks.

Dr Johns said there had been 'great strides' in Indigenous rights over four decades, referencing the successful referendum in 1967 which allowed for Indigenous Australians to be counted in the census and removed racial discrimination.

But he said discussions about Indigenous citizenship were 'hijacked because the obsession was with land'.

'It was as if it was a postcolonial situation where people had regained their land and were fighting to establish a nation.

'There was an obsession with preserving difference. It is what you do in zoos - preserve things and put them aside.'


Dr Johns has rallied against a Voice and suggested Indigenous people should take a blood test to confirm their heritage before they receive any benefits.

'There is always something new in this game of Aboriginal separatism. A new product on the shelf,' he said in the 2003 speech.

He argued academics who live outside of and are removed from disadvantaged communities have 'taken power from those Aborigines and produced a whole new set of Aboriginal leaders'.

He said the new Aboriginal leaders 'knew that they would come to power by using western education to represent their people, and no longer seeking equal opportunity, but the right to be different in a very radical way'.

'The reason is that too much of Aboriginal life is politicised, and too much of Aboriginal life is lived in the government domain.'

He argued against rhetoric that 'Aboriginal culture must be preserved, and that somehow governments can preserve it'.

'Governments cannot preserve culture. Aboriginal people own their own culture, and every mother and father in this room knows that you can pass it on, but you cannot be assured that your sons and daughters will want to hear the message that you pass on,' he said.

'You just cannot control the next generation.'

His comments have sparked outrage from politicians and officials committed to the Yes vote, describing his views as 'extreme' and 'beyond the pale'.


"Black Power!" is Aboriginal for "Give Me Money!"
Reverend Cailen Cambeul, P.M.E.
Church Administrator, Creativity Alliance
Church of Creativity South Australia
Box 7051, West Lakes, SA, Australia, 5021

Email: Admin@creativityalliance.com
Crypto Coin Details in Forum Profile

Noli Nothis Permittere Le Terere
The only way to prevent 1984 is 2323
Joining the Creativity Alliance is Free
https://creativityalliance.com/join


"In the beginning of a change, the patriot is a scarce man, brave, hated, and scorned.
When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot."
Mark Twain.


Br.IanVonTurpie

It's all what should happen! Too much Indige ID fraud. Get a DNA test ! Fair enough?!

We are keeping Abos as "pets".
If we were serious about getting fruit pickers and about helping them. Best thing ever would be to shut their communities they claim they are at one with in the remote spots and move them to pick fruit. Continue to assist them on their new turf as long as they are working!

It can't be a "free for all" forever!

What becomes of remote communities? Get White people from both South Africa and Ukraine to move there and watch the grass grow out of the dust bowl! It'd help keep miners and tradies on that turf as more blokes could start families with that gene pool there.

Give any White person a visa from anywhere as long as they settle and work there for 15 years min.
The Price is Reich!

Find me on Stormfront as QueJumpingAfghan where I have been banned!
Formerly Based in the Northern Territory
Now in Adelaide, South Australia
The Whitest City in Australia
Click to see map of Australia
https://creativityalliance.com/join

Br.IanVonTurpie

The Price is Reich!

Find me on Stormfront as QueJumpingAfghan where I have been banned!
Formerly Based in the Northern Territory
Now in Adelaide, South Australia
The Whitest City in Australia
Click to see map of Australia
https://creativityalliance.com/join

Rev.Cambeul

'Almost no one checks': Claims nearly 'a third' of people claiming to be Aboriginal aren't

Reverend Cailen Cambeul, P.M.E.
Church Administrator, Creativity Alliance
Church of Creativity South Australia
Box 7051, West Lakes, SA, Australia, 5021

Email: Admin@creativityalliance.com
Crypto Coin Details in Forum Profile

Noli Nothis Permittere Le Terere
The only way to prevent 1984 is 2323
Joining the Creativity Alliance is Free
https://creativityalliance.com/join


"In the beginning of a change, the patriot is a scarce man, brave, hated, and scorned.
When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot."
Mark Twain.


Similar topics (5)

 
 
Church Links Holy Books W.R.L. Friends Holoco$t Links
 

Legal Notices
Due to a 2003 CE decision in the US 7th Circuit Court Of Appeals, the name “Church of the Creator” is the trademarked property of a Christian entity known as TE-TA-MA Truth Foundation-Family of URI®. Use of the name “Church of the Creator” in any context is historical, and is presented for educational purposes only. The Church of Creativity makes no attempt to assume or supersede the trademark. Trademark remains with the trademark holder. [More ...]
 
The Church of Creativity is a Professional, Non-Violent, Progressive Pro-White Religion. We promote White Civil Rights, White Self-Determination, and White Liberation via 100% legal activism. We do not promote, tolerate nor incite illegal activity. [More ...]



Creator Origins
Church of the Creator: Founded by Ben Klassen - Year Zero (1973CE)
Your Own Creator Forum: Continuously Online Since 25AC (1998CE)
Creativity Alliance & Church of Creativity: Founded 30AC (2003CE)
Links: The History of Creativity | The Creator Calendar Explained
» Save the White Race - Join the Church of Creativity «

23 Words
What is good for the White Race is of the Highest Virtue;
What is bad for the White Race is the Ultimate Sin.


Main Website   Forum RSS Feed   Send Mail   About Us
Copyright © 30 AC - AC (2003 CE - CE), Creativity Alliance. All Rights Reserved.
Back to the Top