Pottery sessions at the Cherbourg Historical, Cultural and Community Precinct, trading as the Ration Shed Museum, developed and promoted the skills of local First Nations potters and artists through a series of training and mentoring workshops.
The pottery sessions were focused on maintaining a strong culture where knowledge and practice is passed on by recognised and respected Elders and peers.
Hand-building with clay workshops engaged the community in arts practice, skills development and capacity building.
The workshop activities incorporated the full production process, from creation to sales, to improve economic outcomes for workshop participants and the artists of the Ration Shed Museum.
The Ration Shed Museum was founded in 2006 by a group of Elders in the Cherbourg community.
The Museum, which is a not-for-profit association incorporated in Queensland, includes the original buildings, old photographs, recorded oral histories, integrated into contemporary creative cultural expression and practices which provided an important cultural backdrop for the pottery sessions.
A core ambition of the Ration Shed Museum has been to revitalize the distinctive Barambah/Cherbourg pottery into an economic strength, developing production and distribution into a wholesale and retail business and to build on its tourism retail strategy.
These pottery workshops helped to deliver on these priorities.
The Ration Shed Museum is committed to nurturing existing partnerships and to access future opportunities with local potters, artists, community groups and schools in the area.
By promoting culture through artistic expression, the Ration Shed Museum encourages more Indigenous youth to train as potters and artists, highlighting the economic benefits that can be gained both by individuals and the community
From 5 October 2020 to 28 May 2021 at the Pottery House in the Ration Shed Museum, Cherbourg.
$17,000 through the Indigenous Regional Arts Development Fund (IRADF) 2019-2020.
IRADF, part of the Backing Indigenous Arts Initiative, is a partnership between the Queensland Government, through Arts Queensland, the Torres Strait Regional Authority, Aboriginal Councils and host organisations throughout Queensland with an aim to maintain culture and engage local communities in arts practice.
Professional Development
Elevating First Nations arts
Activate Queensland’s places and spaces
Driving social change and strengthen communities
Share our stories and celebrate our storytellers.
Delivering the project through impacts of COVID
Community Collaboration
Aunty Sandra Morgan, Committee Member of Cherbourg Ration Shed Museum said the project would “strengthen the operational management of the Ration Shed Museum and allow us to broaden our community initiatives, building on what we have already created”.
“The Ration Shed Museum is an integral part of the Cherbourg community, providing spaces for learning, artistic practice, healing and reconciliation,” Aunty Sandra Morgan said.
Funding of $210,000 will be provided over two financial years from 2021-22 and 2022-23 towards the Ration Shed Museum as part of Arts Queensland’s investment in local Indigenous Arts Centres (IAC), to strengthen the IAC network build artist and arts worker skills and increase the supply of quality First Nations artwork.
Arts Queensland is working closely with the Cherbourg Historical Precinct Group Incorporated as part of a new approach to realise locally-led investment priorities that will make a positive and long term impact.
The IAC funding will grow the reputation of the Ration Shed Museum as a cultural tourism destination.