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Cairns Indigenous Art Fair launches expanded ambassador program and digital truth-telling initiative

Phoebe Blogg
Phoebe Blogg Published June 9, 2026 at 1.00pm (AWST)

Registrations are now open for Breaking Ground in a Digital Age, a free online workshop presented by Cairns Indigenous Art Fair.

The Cairns Indigenous Art Fair (CIAF) is one of Australia's premier First Nations-led art fair and cultural celebration, held annually on Gimuy Walubara Yidinji Country in Gimuy/Cairns, Queensland.

Supported by Creative Australia's Storytelling and Recording: First Nations Project Fund, the $50,000 initiative will deliver on-Country, online, and hybrid workshops, mentoring, and recording opportunities across regional and remote Queensland between June 2026 and June 2027, focused on ethical storytelling, Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) protections and media engagement.

The workshop comes after Breaking Ground in a Digital Age was first presented by CIAF on Wednesday 3 June in partnership with the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA), which featured guest speakers Georgia Mokak and CIAF Art Fair Showcase exhibitor Rachael Bywaters.

CIAF's 2026 Ambassador Program builds on the momentum of its 2025 pilot, which generated more than 1.8 million views and helped ambassador alumni secure paid creative commissions, collaborations, and ongoing professional opportunities.

In 2026, the program expands beyond the festival period itself, creating year-round opportunities through workshops, mentoring, digital storytelling, media training and community engagement.

With a focus on ethical storytelling, media engagement, Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) protections, and culturally grounded digital communications practice, CIAF's digital truth-telling and ambassador campaign will be delivered through the organisation's professional development platform, CATAPULT, in partnership with digital communications specialist, Talicia Minniecon of Mob Made Media & Communications Agency (MMM&CA).

CIAF 2025 Exhibitor Kerry Klimm and ambassador Samara Barlow-Fukofuka at Cairns Indigenous Art Fair's opening night in 2025. (Image: Blueclick Photography)

According to Ms Minniecon, the program is all-powerful in its design to strengthen story sovereignty, ethical amplification and self-determined representation.

"We're seeing more First Nations creatives, artists, entrepreneurs and community leaders navigating media and online spaces every day, often without access to culturally safe training or support," she said.

"This program is about equipping people with the confidence, tools and ethical frameworks to communicate with purpose, while protecting cultural integrity and maintaining control over our own narratives."

CIAF artistic director, Teho Ropeyarn, said the project represented an important investment in First Nations-led truth-telling, professional development and cultural legacy.

"CIAF has always been about creating platforms for First Nations voices, creativity and cultural leadership," Mr Ropeyarn said.

"This exceptional project builds on the success of our existing CATAPULT professional development program and expands it into a dedicated truth-telling and recording stream that supports communities to tell their stories on their own terms.

"It is about strengthening skills, protecting cultural authority and ensuring First Nations peoples maintain control over how stories, cultural practice and knowledge are recorded and shared."

Cairns Indigenous Art Fair Artistic Director Teho Ropeyarn (centre) with CIAF Ambassadors at CIAF 2025. (Image: Lewis James Media)

Adding to the strength of the program, Tourism and Events Queensland (TEQ) through the Queensland Destination Events Program (QDEP) and the Torres Strait Regional Authority (TSRA) are supporting the expansion of the CIAF x MMM&CA Ambassador Program, reflecting growing investment in grassroots, place-based First Nations storytelling initiatives.

TSRA's support will also enable a dedicated Zenadth Kes Ambassador to participate in the program.

The initiative will include on-Country outreach, truth-telling and recording workshops, training in ethical media engagement, consent, attribution and ICIP protection, hands-on audio and video recording using accessible tools and much more.

Workshops and mentoring will be delivered in partnership with regional art centres, cultural organisations and community leadership across Southeast Queensland, Cape York, Zenadth Kes/Torres Strait and Gulf communities.

CIAF's CATAPULT program has operated since 2014 as a professional development and capacity-building initiative supporting Queensland First Nations artists through mentoring, exhibition pathways and industry engagement.

Breaking Ground in a Digital Age will be held on Wednesday 10 June as the first activation of CAIF's expanded First Nations digital truth-telling initiative and 2026 Ambassador Program.

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National Indigenous Times

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