{"links":{"self":"http://dataportal.arc.gov.au/NCGP/API/grants/FT250100383"},"data":{"type":"grant-details","id":"FT250100383","attributes":{"code":"FT250100383","administering-organisation":"Adelaide University","announcement-administering-organisation":"The University of Adelaide","scheme-name":"ARC Future Fellowships","grant-status":"Active","funding-commencement-year":2025,"years-funded":4,"project-start-date":"2026-03-01","anticipated-end-date":"2030-03-01","grant-summary":"A Warlpiri art history: community perspectives of a global art movement . Warlpiri artists have produced some of the most influential Australia art of the last century, yet their art history has never been written. In collaboration with Warlpiri people, this project aims to create the first comprehensive record of Warlpiri art. The research will generate new knowledge of the cultural, economic and conceptual bases for Warlpiri creative practice by bridging anthropological and art historical methodologies. This will be communicated through high-impact outputs such as the publication of a Warlpiri Art History. Other outcomes and benefits of the project include documenting and preserving vulnerable cultural heritage, assembling critical archives for future research, and the mentoring of Aboriginal researchers. ","funding-current":1300203.00,"funding-at-announcement":1272875,"investigators-current":[{"title":"Prof","firstName":"John","familyName":"Carty","roleName":"Future Fellowship","roleCode":"FT","isFellowship":true,"orcidIdentifier":null}],"investigators-at-announcement":[{"title":"Prof","firstName":"John","familyName":"Carty","roleName":"Future Fellowship","roleCode":"FT","isFellowship":true,"orcidIdentifier":null}],"organisations-current":[{"organisationName":"Adelaide University","roleName":"Administering Organisation","state":"SA"}],"organisations-at-announcement":[{"organisationName":"The University of Adelaide","roleName":"Administering Organisation","state":"SA"}],"field-of-research":[{"isPrimary":false,"code":"360102","name":"Art History","type":"FOR20"},{"isPrimary":true,"code":"4401","name":"Anthropology","type":"FOR20"},{"isPrimary":false,"code":"440107","name":"Social and Cultural Anthropology","type":"FOR20"},{"isPrimary":false,"code":"450116","name":"Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Visual Arts and Crafts","type":"FOR20"}],"socio-economic-objective":[{"code":"130201","name":"Communication Across Languages and Culture","type":"SEO20"},{"code":"210404","name":"Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Knowledge","type":"SEO20"},{"code":"210407","name":"Conserving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage and Culture","type":"SEO20"}],"international-collaboration":["Switzerland","United States of America"],"lief-register":[],"achievement-summary":null,"national-interest-test-statement":"This project explores the legacy of one of the most important groups of Aboriginal artists in Australia. The Warlpiri people have influenced the direction of Australian Art, created their own Museums and even paved the forecourt of Australia's parliament with their designs. But their story is yet to be told. \nThis co-designed project will benefit the nation culturally and socially by correcting a significant gap in our understanding of Australian art and Aboriginal cultural diplomacy. The book produced on Warlpiri art will create visibility for their achievements and a wider audience for their art. It will also improve Warlpiri capacity to manage cultural heritage assets, preserve archival materials, and develop community-driven research projects: experience and skills gained on the project benefitting a younger generation of Warlpiri professionals. This capacity building will have long term social, cultural and economic benefits for the Warlpiri people. It will model the concrete benefits of co-designed research for community and scholarly stakeholders and improve government policy on economic development and sustainability in remote arts enterprises.\nCore research outcomes are designed to have public impact. The book on Warlpiri art history is designed to speak beyond academia directly to the Australian and international public. The research will also underpin the development of a Warlpiri retrospective exhibition of their art to be hosted at major institutions.\n\n"}}}