Elsie, Dorothy and Amanda Gabori talking about their dad's country, Dibirdibi. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori's family and Nicholas Evans discovering the archives connected to Sally Gabori and Bentinck Island history. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori's family and Nicholas Evans discovering the archives connected to Sally Gabori and Bentinck Island history. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Tori Wilson, Elsie, Amanda and Dorothy Gabori describe Sweers Island collaborative painting. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori's family discover archives about Sally and kaiadilt history. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
From left to right: Anna Gabori, Bob Thompson, Elsie Gabori Dibirdibi, Nicholas Evans, Tori Wilson, Amanda Jane Gabori Dibirdibi, Dorothy Gabori, Bella Gabori, Maxwell Gabori. Cairns, 2022. Photo © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Juliette Lecorne, curator of the exhibition, presenting the digital project "Sally Gabori" layout to Tori Wilson, Elsie Gabori, Dorothy Gabori and Amanda Gabori. Cairns, 2022. Photo © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori's family talking about family history. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori painting Dibirdibi Country. Art & Craft Center, Mornington Island, 2009 Video 48’08’’ © The Estate of Sally Gabori. Video © Inge Cooper
Bella Gabori, Tori Wilson, Bob Thompson, Elsie Gabori, Dorothy Gabori, Amanda Gabori and Nicholas Evans. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Elsie, Amanda and Dorothy Gabori describe their collaborative work with their mum, Sally Gabori. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Elsie and Amanda Gabori describe their collaborative work with their mum, Sally Gabori. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Elsie, Amanda and Dorothy Gabori presenting themselves with their kaiadilt names. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
Sally Gabori's family and Nicholas Evans discovering the archives connected to Sally Gabori and Bentinck Island history. Cairns, 2022. Video © Craig Bender and Vera Hong
In 2011, the Supreme Court of Queensland commissioned Sally Gabori for a mural – an enlargement of her painting Dibirdibi Country (2008). One of the emblematic sites of the legal system, which deprived the Kaiadilt of their rights for over two centuries, now spectacularly displays its recognition of Kaiadilt culture.
Dorothy and Amanda Gabori at the Supreme Court of Queensland in front of the painting of their mother, June 2022. © The Estate of Sally Gabori / Adagp, Paris, 2022.
The Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain wishes to advise the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander comunities that this site contains images and names of deceased Aboriginal people.
All images on this site are the property of the Estate of Sally Gabori and the Kaiadilt community.
Any use without their permission is prohibited.