Queen Victoria Market is banning the sale of inauthentic indigenous products from 1 July 2023.Queen Victoria Market chief executive Stan Liacos said selling the products harmed indigenous creators and was out of step with contemporary Australian values and expectations.Queen Victoria Market will ban the sale of inauthentic Indigenous products, such as overseas-made boomerangs and imitation artworks, in a bid to protect and encourage Aboriginal art and culture.
“The Productivity Commission is intending to move on this matter probably next year and we wanted to get ahead of it,” he said. “We know that we’ll lose a little bit of customers as a result of this,” he said. “We think that is a small price to pay for the bigger question about doing the right thing.”Credit:Market trader Jye Richardson sells both authentic and inauthentic Indigenous products at his stall, Made Tarsa, and said he welcomed the ban.
Lord Mayor Sally Capp said she pushed for the ban at the market as the sale of the inauthentic goods was disrespectful to Indigenous culture. The Productivity Commission’s draft report into Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander visual arts and crafts published in July called for mandatory labelling of inauthentic products to help warn consumers and curb the significant cultural harm that the products cause to artists and consumers.The report found sales of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art were worth $250 million in 2019-2020 but artists themselves only received a fraction of this money.
carawaters Aboriginal dot painting was invented by a visiting English primary school teacher in the 1970s
carawaters Maybe those complaining should pull their head in?
carawaters Customs should ban it from entering the country. I sell collectables, and it can be hard to tell the difference sometimes. I've sold a lot of genuine Aboriginal art and weapons, but even got fooled myself with a Chinese fake a couple of years ago.
carawaters What a crap headline. Repetition of the word 'move.' Try this. Queen Victoria Market will ban lethal food products, containing poison, but the move has divided stall holders with some labelling it an 'over-woke' move.
carawaters
carawaters About flaming time too.
carawaters The new religion
carawaters Are the markets going to employ an indigenous expert to annalise each stalls art work, sure that will come with a hefty price tag. What next watch makers Tag, Seiko need a watch expert, everyone knows there fake.
carawaters Talking about inauthentic indigenous products can we get rid of welcome to country ceremonies then. Modern made up nonsense.
carawaters Amazing that this can be labeled with the ‘w’ word when it’s a clear theft of cultural property and disadvantages traditional artists. Your headline is garbage. Do better. Thisisnotjournalism
carawaters Should have happened years ago. Rubbish made overseas. Theft of cultural property. Deprives Indigenous Australians of revenue.
carawaters They should go even further & ban the sale of anything indigenous that is not made with traditional materials & in the traditional way.
carawaters If they are licenced reproductions by the real artist ok but if it's some mass produced china garbage then no that should be banned. At least make sure it's Australian made.
carawaters Does this apply to all australiana, or just one race?
carawaters It’s not April 1st is it?
carawaters Wtf. Seriously our world is cooked. Cooked.
carawaters As soon a someone uses “woke” I know what side I’m on. Well done Queen VIC Market.
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