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Indigenous teen's artwork selected for prestigious honour as library marks milestone

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A painting by a proud Kabi Kabi and Wakka Wakka girl has been selected as the official image for Noosa Library Service’s 50th birthday celebrations.

Alkirah Bell’s painting Connections Through Water, currently on display at the Cooroy Library, has water as a key motif.

“Water has connections,” she said. “It’s connected to everything, from the ocean to our bodies with over 60 per cent of water. The waterholes represent everything and everyone connected.

“I think water connects us all together. Whatever water we drink has already been drunk by someone or something else. My painting represents this through the ocean. The ocean is never the same, it’s always changing, just like us.

“The dots in the middle represent us together as a community, working together.”

Acting libraries and galleries manager Tracey King said themes of community, connection, learning and storytelling – explored in the painting – were also central to libraries.

“As we celebrate 50 years of our libraries, we’re honoured to promote local Kabi Kabi culture and pay respect to local traditional custodians of the land on which our libraries are located,” she said.

Alkirah says she is lucky to have been taught her culture from a young age, passed down by her ancestors, including her great-great-great grandparents Willie Crowe and Emma Dunne, who are featured in the Noosa Council documentary Place of Crows.

A Noosa Library kiosk.

As the successful artist, Alkirah received a $2500 cash prize.

Ms King thanked all of the local First Nations artists who submitted an artwork to the call for expressions of interest.

“Our library service has changed a lot in 50 years. Noosa Shire’s first library opened in December 1973, on Moorindil Street in Tewantin, later relocating to Pelican Street in 1983,” she said.

“A decade later our current Maurice Hurst-designed library building in Wallace Park at Noosaville opened, with a second library opening at Cooroy in 2010.

“These days our library service offers access to more than 100,000 physical and digital items for borrowing. We also have the mobile library service and vending kiosks at Pomona and Peregian, which expand our physical presence out to the further reaches of the shire.

“Our library service now also provides a broad range of programs and events that support literacy and lifelong learning, as well as access to publicly accessible technologies and digital literacy support”.

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