‘These works are a love letter to everyone that stood with us last year. Thank you.'
‘Ngayuku Manta Ngayuku Wangka (My land, my voice) is my first show after the 2023 referendum.
It’s full of works filled with emotions dealing with the hurt, sadness that First Nations people were feeling after October 14. The more I painted and dealt with what happened. I painted the love and hope that 6.2 millions Australia that voted yes with us.
I painted the love and hope and drive I saw and felt with Aunty Pat Anderson and Megan Davis, during the last 7 years of getting the Uluṟu statement to the referendum. Turning the maybes into yes, sitting in tough conversations and stepping it through and all the time staying true to the Uluṟu Statement.
I painted the love, strength and ambition of my elders and leaders, whom after all the negativity of the last year are still ambition and courageous to strive for more for our remote and regional communities. Because everyone deserves a safe space to work especially woman.'
'We grew up knowing we had to use our voices for our families and communities. It's go time.'
A proud Pitjantjatjara woman from far west of the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands in remote South Australia, Sally Scales creates vibrant landscapes that represent her ancestral home and tjukurpa. Her unique aesthetic combines elements of the artistic styles of her two grandmothers, Kuntjiriya Mick and Kunmanara (Wawiriya) Burton, and her mother, Josephine Mick.
In addition to her studio practice, Sally plays an active leadership role in the Uluru Dialogue for the First Nations Voice to Parliament, is a board member of the Australian Children’s Television Foundation, and a member of the National Gallery of Australia Council and Chair of its First Nations Advisory Group.
A regular finalist in major art prizes, Sally won the People's Choice Award at the 2021 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA) at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, and the Roberts Family Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 2022.
On top of all of these commitments, Sally is foster mum to Walter.
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