The idea for Gabrugal Yana came from an arts and culture accelerator program run by Western Sydney Parklands. Artists of various cultural backgrounds, including First Nations artists and artists from western Sydney, came together, camped on Country and created lots of wonderful ideas on how to share stories and create experiences for people using the parklands.
The original concepts for Gabrugal Yana were developed by First Nations artists Djon Mundine OAM and Shay Tobin. The Dharug naming process was conducted with the artists and a group of local knowledge holders and cultural advisors, led and managed by Indigenous design and strategy agency, Balarinji.
Presentations were made to a number of stakeholders including Liverpool City Council throughout the process and additional Dharug cultural advisors and artists were intricately involved in both the design, tree location, story-telling and language, and interpretive signage content.
Other Aboriginal artists involved in fabrication include carver Jamie Eastwood and weavers Corina Wayali Gili Norman and Venessa Dyubi Gili Possum.
It has been a beautiful experience where artists and carvers have worked on Country for months to share their culture with the broader community.