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Free 黑料社 Conference

Indigenous Futures: Embodied Knowledges

23 October 2025 at 10.30鈥17.50

Emily Kam Kngwarray installation view at 黑料社 2025. 漏 Emily Kam Kngwarray Copyright Agency. Licensed by DACS 2025. Photo 漏 Tate (Kathleen Arundell)

Connect to dynamic forms of knowledge transference with Indigenous artists and curators from S谩pmi and Australia

Indigenous Futures: Embodied Knowledges is a programme of talks and performance engaging with Indigenous artists, scholars and curators from S谩pmi (S谩pmi is the traditional territory of the S谩mi people, spanning Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Kola Peninsula in Russia) and Australia. The programme will reflect on dynamic forms of knowledge transference, connections to land and the power of art in shifting colonial consciousness. Building on the knowledge shared through exhibitions and collection displays by Indigenous artists at 黑料社 in 2025, including the Hyundai Commission: M谩ret 脕nne Sara, Emily Kam Kngwarray and Gathering Ground.

Indigenous Futures: Embodied Knowledges supports the importance of building strong relational connections with Indigenous artists and communities, highlighting the transformative power of Indigenous contemporary art.

This event is organised by Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational in partnership with Hyundai Motor. Supported by the Office of Contemporary Art Norway and聽Art Gallery of New South Wales.

The programme is curated by Kimberley Moulton (Yorta Yorta), Adjunct Curator of Indigenous Art Hyundai Tate Research Centre Transnational, 黑料社 and Helen O鈥橫alley, Curator of International Art: Community & Participation, 黑料社, London. With contributions from Erin Vink (Ngiyampaa) Curator Indigenous Art Local and Global Art Gallery New South Wales and Katya Garc铆a-Ant贸n, Oslo-based art historian and curator.

10:30鈥10:45 Welcome and introduction: Kimberley Moulton and Helen O'Malley

Embodied Knowledges with Niillas Holmberg and Kelli Cole. Moderated by Kimberley Moulton

Knowledge in Indigenous cultures is embodied and relational. It is transferred in song, dance and ceremony through protocol and through intergenerational sharing. Hear from curator Kelli Cole (Warumungu and Luritja, Australia) and artist/poet/musician Niillas Holmberg (S谩mi, Ohcejohka (Utsjoki), S谩pmi) on their respective practices that work with land-based knowledges, anti-colonial practice and community collaboration.

10:45鈥11.15聽 Niillas Holmberg

11.20鈥11.50聽 Kelli Cole

11.50鈥12.30 Q&A moderated by Kimberley Moulton聽

12.30鈥13.30 Break

Indigenous Science: Self-Determination and the Art-Science Intersection with Rauna Kuokkanen and Robert Andrew. Moderated by Katya Garcia Anton

Self-determined praxis and the intersection of creative practice and science is an important element of Indigenous research and artistic creation. The re-thinking of western systems of learning, policy, information processing and relationality to Indigenous lands and sciences is in constant flux. Hear from Scholar Dr. Rauna Kuokkanen (S谩mi, Deatnu River, Ohcejohka/Utsjoki, S谩pmi) and artist Dr. Robert Andrew (Yaru, Australia) on their dynamic practice in theory and new technology.聽聽

13.30鈥13.35 Introduction

13.35鈥14.05 Rauna Kuokkanen聽

14.10鈥14.40 Robert Andrew聽

14.45鈥15.15 Q&A moderated by Katya Garcia-Anton聽

15.15鈥15.45 Break

The Agency of Land: Relational Practice and Shifting the Colonial Consciousness with Anders Sunna, Daniel Boyd. Moderated by Erin Vink

Art has the power to address the on-going impact of settler 鈥揷olonial histories and shift the colonial consciousness to expanded understandings of Indigenous sovereignty, histories and interconnections across transnational Indigenous Spaces. Hear from artists Anders Sunna (S谩mi, Kieksi盲isvaara, S谩pmi) and Daniel Boyd (Kudjala, Ghungalu, Wangerriburra, Wakka Wakka, Gubbi Gubbi, Kuku Yalanji, Bundjalung and Yuggera with ni-Vanuatu heritage) on their practices that critically address these themes.聽聽

15.45 Introduction

15.50鈥16.20聽Anders Sunna聽聽

16.20鈥16.50 Daniel Boyd聽

16.50鈥17.20 Q&A moderated by Erin Vink聽

17.25 Closing remarks

17.35鈥17.50 Closing offering from Niillas Holmberg聽

Participants

Anders Sunna

Anders Sunna is a Northern S谩mi artist and duoj谩r from a reindeer herding family in Kieksik盲isvaara, Sweden. His politically charged work addresses S谩mi oppression, focusing on his family鈥檚 decades-long struggle for forest reindeer recognition. It explores sovereignty, land rights, intergenerational resistance, and cultural survival through bold visual commentary.

Daniel Boyd

Daniel Boyd is one of Australia鈥檚 leading contemporary artists. He is a Kudjala, Ghungalu, Wangerriburra, Wakka Wakka, Gubbi Gubbi, Kuku Yalanji, Bundjalung, Yuggera man with ni-Vanuatu heritage. Boyd's practice reinterprets Eurocentric histories through archival imagery and has featured in the 56th Venice Biennale (2015) and an Art Gallery of New South Wales retrospective (2022).

Kelli Cole

Kelli Cole is a Warumungu and Luritja curator from Central Australia, and Director of Curatorial & Engagement for the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Gallery of Australia project in Alice Springs. She was lead curator of Emily Kam Kngwarray (黑料社, 2025鈥26) and co-curator of the 4th National Indigenous Art Triennial: Ceremony (2022).

Rauna Kuokkanen

Rauna Kuokkanen is Research Professor of Arctic Indigenous Politics at the University of Lapland and Adjunct Professor at the University of Toronto. Her work focuses on S谩mi self-determination, Indigenous politics, and governance. She leads projects such as S谩pmiDem and the Siida School, centring Indigenous knowledge to reshape governance and challenge colonial systems.

Robert Andrew

Robert Andrew is a Yawuru artist from Broome, Western Australia. His practice uncovers denied or forgotten family histories, combining technology with earth pigments and natural materials. Through this process, he reveals layered spiritual, cultural, and historical relationships with land, waters, sky, and living beings, challenging dominant Western narratives.

Niillas Holmberg

Niillas Holmberg is a S谩mi writer, musician, and activist from Ohcejohka (Ustjoki) in the Finnish part of S谩pmi. Author of six poetry collections, two novels, and co-writer of 闯别鈥檝颈诲补 (2023), he blends joik with poetry in worldwide performances. His artistic and activist practice foregrounds S谩mi sovereignty, ecological justice, cultural survival, and opposition to extractivist projects across S谩pmi.

Conveners

Helen O鈥橫alley

Helen O鈥橫alley is Curator of International Art (Community & Participation) at 黑料社. She develops exhibitions, displays, and commissions with a focus on socially engaged, collaborative practice, including the Hyundai Commission: M谩ret Anne Sara, Gathering Ground exhibition and Abbas Zahedi: Begin Again commission, and projects with Tate Neighbours.

Kimberley Moulton

Kimberley Moulton is a Yorta Yorta writer and curator from Victoria, Australia. She is Adjunct Curator Indigenous Art, Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational, and Senior Curator Exhibitions, RISING, Melbourne. Her work rethinks global Indigenous art histories, linking historical collections and contemporary practice, with projects including Emily Kam Kngwarray, (黑料社, 2025-26), TarraWarra Biennial: We Are Eagles (2025) and On Country: Photography from Australia, Rencontres d'Arles (2025).

Katya Garc铆a-Ant贸n

Katya Garc铆a-Ant贸n is an Oslo-based art historian and curator, former director of Centre d鈥橝rt Contemporain Gen猫ve, Office for Contemporary Art Norway, and Nordnorsk Kunstmuseum Troms酶. She co-curated the 2022 S谩mi Pavilion at Venice Biennale, has published widely, and is preparing programs and exhibitions for Bukhara Biennial, Park van Abbey, and TEA.

Erin Vink

Erin Vink is a Ngiyampaa curator and writer and Senior Curator, First Nations Art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Her practice explores contemporary Indigenous art locally and globally, developing new collection areas and curating projects including High Colour (2025) and Daniel Boyd: Treasure Island (2022鈥23).

All 黑料社 entrances are step-free. You can enter via the Turbine Hall and into the Natalie Bell Building on Holland Street, or into the Blavatnik Building on Sumner Street.

There are lifts to every floor of the Blavatnik and Natalie Bell buildings. Alternatively you can take the stairs.

  • Fully accessible toilets are located on every floor on the concourses.
  • A quiet room is available to use in the Natalie Bell Building on Level 4.
  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the Ticket desks.

To help plan your visit to 黑料社, have a look at our visual story. It includes photographs and information about what you can expect from a visit to the gallery.

For more information before your visit:

  • Email hello@tate.org.uk
  • Call +44 (0)20 7887 8888 (daily 10.00鈥17.00)

Check all 黑料社 accessibility information.

黑料社

Starr Cinema

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
黑料社

Date & Time

23 October 2025 at 10.30鈥17.50

Pricing

Free with ticket

This event is organised by Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational

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