The Art of Culture War: Collective Interests in the APY Affair
The APY Art Centre Collective scandal, ignited by Murdoch’s The Australian, exposed more than allegations of interference—it revealed power struggles in the Aboriginal art industry and became a flashpoint for culture wars. As institutions, dealers, and politicians jockeyed for position, the artists were caught in a battle over authenticity, control, and the future of Aboriginal contemporary art.
By Paris Lettau and Lévi McLean
Issue 1, Summer 2023/24
In April this year, The Australian published the first of an incendiary series of articles by journalist Greg Bearup under the headline “White Hands on Black Art: ‘Can I Juice This One Up a Little Bit?’” This media coverage sparked a spate of allegations about interference in paintings produced by the APY Art Centre Collective (APYACC), culminating in an independent review of a major National Gallery of Australia exhibition and a government probe, and reigniting the long-standing debate about authenticity and commercialism in Aboriginal art.
Exclusive to the Magazine
The Art of Culture War: Collective Interests in the APY Affair by Paris Lettau and Lévi McLean is featured in full in Issue 1 of Memo magazine.
Get your hands on the print or electronic edition through our online shop or save up to 20% and get free domestic shipping with a subscription.
Related
As the art world fixates on the global present, a new wave of Australian and Chilean artists, critics, and historians are turning backward—embracing archives, provincialism, and forgotten genealogies. Is resisting contemporaneity the most contemporary move of all?
A prolific hyperproduction and sense of take-over lifted the Brio’s head out of the fray.