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Blak & Bright operates on the unceded lands of the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung and Boonwurrung peoples of the Kulin Nations. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the Owners and Custodians of the land, water and sky of this Country. We pay our respect to all Elders past, present and future.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples should be aware that this website may contain images, footage, voices or names of deceased persons.

Since 2016, we have been committed to celebrating the diverse expressions of First Nations writers across all genres – from oral stories to epic novels and plays to poetry. We were originally known for our flagship event, a multi-day festival in Naarm, which was delivered to widespread acclaim four times – in 2016, 2019, and 2022 – under the leadership of Festival Director Jane Harrison. 

In recent years we have established year round programming, partnering with like minded organisations across Australia. Our workshops, panels, and performances carve out unique spaces for Blak conversations and showcasing emerging and established First Nations writers to a growing and increasingly diverse mainstream audience.

We believe that First Nations stories are for everyone.

Driven by the belief that Blak stories are for everyone, we support the economic advancement of First Nations peoples by contributing to sustainable writing careers and careers in the literature sector, providing valuable industry skills and mentorship to enhance the skills, knowledge, and abilities of our community in the arts.

The next festival in 2026 will be led by Bebe Oliver, a descendant of the Bardi Jawi people who brings a wealth of experience in the arts and a deep commitment to First Nations culture.
To stay up to date and be the first to hear about Blak & Bright programs and events, subscribe to our newsletter or follow us on Facebook, Instagram or LinkedIn.

We are committed to:

  • Self determination in our work and relationships: we are First Nations led, employ First Nations staff, and engage services run by First Nations businesses wherever possible.
  • Respect: for the views and dignity of our community of writers and the wider First Nations community. This means listening to feedback and a commitment to continuous improvement.
  • Valuing relationships: we fairly remunerate writers and artists for their work, and ensure our processes are as important and valued as our outcomes.
  • Reciprocity: giving back to our writing community where we can.

Blak & Bright honours the self-determination and self-expression of our community, and understands that First Nations peoples are diverse in their values, beliefs and opinions. Our literary festival is a place where artistic freedom, and freedom of speech, is protected, promoted and upheld, and we seek to create a safe and respectful environment for everyone. We are firmly against violence, racism and discrimination of any kind, and stand with those who advocate and fight for justice, tolerance and empowerment.

Staff

Bebe Oliver
Artistic Director / CEO

Bebe Oliver is a Bardi Jawi award-winning author, poet and illustrator.

Beginning his creative practice as a classical pianist and composer, Bebe was a West Australian Young Person of the Year before producing and directing theatre, dance, public art and festivals across Australia, Aotearoa and Europe.

An experienced leader in Aboriginal advancement and self-determination, Bebe has collaborated with international organisations including Aesop, Global Citizen, and World Pride to celebrate Blak stories, communities and identities.
Bebe’s debut poetry collection, more than these bones (Magabala Books, 2023) received widespread acclaim for its authentic and emotional representation of mental health and human experience.
A writer, facilitator and speaker living on the unceded land of the Kulin peoples, Bebe is committed to the empowerment and visibility of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander writers and creators. He is the Deputy Chair of Magabala Books, Australia’s leading Indigenous publishing house.
Bebe’s highly celebrated and widely published work encompasses love, loss, identity, Aboriginal and gay existence, place and Country.

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Tahli Corin
General Manager

Tahli Corin has worked as a playwright, dramaturg, producer and director for almost 20 years. As a producer she has worked for Belvoir, Melbourne Fringe, Hong Kong Youth Arts Festival, British Council, Sydney Film Festival and produced the inaugural Blak & Bright festival with Jane Harrison in 2016.

Since then, Tahli has worked to build her understanding of the processes and structures of Government and the importance of effective advocacy working in the office of State Member for Macedon, and Minister for Health Mary-Anne Thomas MP.
Tahli is also co-founder of Threshold, a company that creates theatrical experiences that invite people to connect more deeply with each other. From audio theatre experiences, to analogue treasure hunts Threshold’s indoor adventures have brought the delight and wonder of theatre to thousands of homes across the globe.
Now based on the unceded land of the Kaurna people, South Australia, Tahli was thrilled to rejoin the team in 2023 to deliver the latest Blak & Bright festival.

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Skye Cusack
Marketing Manager

Skye is a Dulgubarra-Yidinji marketing manager, who joined Blak & Bright to promote the 2024 festival to literary loving folks like her. Since then, Skye has worn a number of hats at Blak & Bright – including marketing, project management and event production. She is also the unofficial IT support for the team.

She founded BluSkye Marketing in early 2023 (feeling very clever for coming up with the name) with a vision for an accessible First Nations owned marketing agency.

Outside of running BluSkye Marketing, you may find her around Naarm performing yarns that make you laugh, cry and wonder why she’s admitting these things to a live audience. Her Indigenous New Adult novel manuscript was shortlisted for the 2024 black&write! Indigenous Writing Fellowships.

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Board

Anne-Marie Te Whiu
Acting Chair

Anne-Marie Te Whiu an Australian-born Māori who belongs to the Te Rarawa iwi in Hokianga, Aotearoa NZ.  She lives on unceded Wangal Country. She is a cultural producer, writer, editor and weaver.

Most recently she has edited the Woven collection, Tony Birch’s Whisper Songs, Bebe Backhouse’s More Than These Bones as well as Solid Air: Australia & New Zealand Spoken Word which she co-edited.  
Between 2015 – 2017 Ani co-directed the Queensland Poetry Festival, and between 2019 – 2023 she worked at Red Room Poetry where she led projects such as Fair Trade and Poetry Month. Most recently she co-curated the 2024 Writers Programme for the Aotearoa New Zealand International Arts Festival.

She was a 2023 Carriageworks Clothing Stores Studio Artist recipient and in 2022 she was a recipient of The Wheeler Centre’s Next Chapter program and this year she was awarded the The Next Chapter Alumni Poetry Fellowship. She is a Creative Australia Fellowship recipient and has been awarded residencies at Bundanon and Varuna Writers House.

Her writing has been commissioned and published broadly across Australia and Aotearoa including Cordite, Australian Poetry Journal, Rabbit Journal, SBS Voices, Open Books, Tupuranga Journal, Another Australia and more. 
Ani’s forthcoming debut poetry collection titled Mettle will be published by University of Queensland Press in 2025.

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Johanna Featherstone
Secretary

Johanna Featherstone founded Red Room Poetry in 2003 and was the organisation’s artistic director until 2015. In that time Johanna established a national poetry education program for schools and Correctional Centres in NSW, at which she continues to facilitate poetry workshops. Her poetry features in journals and anthologies, including Best Australian Poems (Black Inc) and her chapbook Felt was released in 2010 by Vagabond Press with her second collection, featuring poems, prose and art criticism is forthcoming. (2020).

Johanna is honorary associate of The University of Sydney’s School Arts and Media and a regular peer assessor on literature panels for the Australia Council, Create NSW. Her work as a judge has included the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, JB Fairfax Award for Rural and Regional Journalism and the Marten Bequest Traveling Scholarship. Johanna received a fellowship from the St James Ethics Center (2008) during which time she worked in a mine, studied Tagore and began her journey as a yogi; she teaches the Iyengar method. Much of Johanna’s time is spent adventuring with family including 4 and 6 year old girls and as a Director of the Oranges & Sardines Foundation and Belvoir Theatre. 

Johanna is a co-director of Oranges & Sardines, her family foundation.


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David Ryding
Treasurer

David is the Director of the Melbourne UNESCO City of Literature Office, a role that works in partnership with the City of Melbourne and Creative Victoria in elevating Melbourne’s status as a UNESCO City of Literature.

His previous work includes Program Manager – Early Career Artists at the Australia Council for the Arts, Executive Director at the NSW Writers Centre, Director at the Emerging Writers’ Festival, Artistic Director at Mainstreet Theatre Company, and Associate Director at Barking Gecko Theatre.

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Jane Harrison


Jane Harrison is descended from the Muruwari people of NSW. Her first play Stolen had productions across Australia and toured internationally. She was co-winner of the 2012 RAKA Kate Challis Award for Stolen. Rainbow’s End (2003) has had numerous productions and won the 2012 Drovers Award for best touring production. The Visitors play (2020) premiered at Sydney Festival and won the Sydney Critics Award for Best New Australian Work for 2021. It had a new production at the Sydney Opera House in 2023.

Her novel Becoming Kirrali Lewis won the 2014 Black & Write! Prize, and was shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Literary Awards and the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards. She was the Festival Director of Blak & Bright First Nations Literary Festival (2016, 2019, 2022, 2024) until August 2024.

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Krista Dunstan GAICD


Krista is a Nyoongar woman from South West Wagyl Kaip, has a Bachelor of Laws and a double Masters of International Relations and a Masters of International Law from the University of Western Australia (UWA). Krista is studying an Executive Certificate in Public Policy at Harvard and an MBA at UWA.
Krista has 13 years experience across strategic stakeholder engagement, commercial projects, economic development, advocacy and international relations. Krista is a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and a Director of the Indigenous Arts Foundation.

Krista is also a writer and was shortlisted in the WA Premier’s Book Awards in 2020 for The Daisy Utemorrah Award for Unpublished Indigenous Junior and YA Fiction.

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Angelina Hurley


Angelina Hurley is a writer from Brisbane, of Gooreng Gooreng and Mununjali descent on her father’s side (renowned Aboriginal visual artist Ron Hurley) and Birriah and Gamilaraay descent on her mother’s side. With over 35 years of experience in First Nations Arts, Education, and Community Cultural Development, her writing debuted with the short film Aunty Maggie and the Womba Wakgun (2009). Awarded the 2011 American-Australian Fulbright Indigenous Scholar, she studied at NYU’s Tisch School of Arts. She recently submitted her PhD at Griffith University Film School, writing a set of scripts for an Aboriginal comedy television series Reconciliation Rescue and an exegesis titled Reconciliation Rescue: An Original Blak Comedy Series and Aboriginal Cultural Perspectives on Humour. Her work spans across various mediums including short films, documentaries, and numerous journals, magazines, and online publications. She is presently a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Griffith Universities Creative Arts Research Institute (CARI).

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Mark Stapleton


Mark Stapleton leads the Arcadia Syndicate, providing strategic design and management of Indigenous, arts and community services and programs. As an ally, partner, collaborator, facilitator his primary proposition is success by working cross culturally in project management and administration, consultation, policy development and research.

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Nardi Simpson


Nardi Simpson is a Yuwaalaraay storyteller from New South Wales’ (NSW) northwest freshwater plains. As a member of Indigenous duo Stiff Gins, Nardi has travelled nationally and internationally for the past 22 years. She is also a founding member of Freshwater, an all-female vocal ensemble formed to revive the language and singing traditions of NSW river communities.

Nardi is a graduate of Ngarra-Burria First Peoples Composers and is currently undertaking a PhD through the Australian National University’s School of Music in Composition. Nardi is the current musical director of Barayagal, a cross-cultural choir based at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. In 2021, Nardi was First Nations artist in residence at the Sydney Conservatorium and with Ensemble Offspring.
Nardi’s debut novel, Song of the Crocodile, won the 2017 Black&Write! Fellowship and the ALS Gold Medal, and was longlisted for the 2021 Stella Prize and Miles Franklin Literary Award. Nardi currently lives in Sydney and continues to be heavily involved in the teaching and sharing of culture in both her Sydney and Yuwaalaraay communities. The Belburd is her second novel.

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