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Family & Kinship

Family & Kinship

Family is the centre of everything in our culture. It's where children learn who they are, how to behave and how the world works. But family, for us, is a much bigger circle than it might be elsewhere. Grandparents, aunties, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews and many others in the community are all considered close family - not distant relatives, but people actively involved in raising children and passing down knowledge every single day.

A System, Not Just a Feeling

What's often misunderstood is that our kinship system isn't just an emotional idea of extended family - it's a real, structured system, with rules that have organised how we live for thousands of years. It determines who you're related to, how you should behave toward different family members, who carries responsibility for which stories and ceremonies, and who you can and can't marry. Skin names are part of this system too, they're not separate from kinship, they're one of the ways it's organised and carried.

One thing that often surprises people who aren't familiar with our culture: our kinship terms work differently to the Western idea of family. The system is classificatory, meaning a single term covers many people, not just one. Your mother's sisters are also called mother. Your father's brothers are also called father. Children of the people you call brother or sister are also your children, in terms of how you relate to and care for them. This isn't a looser version of family, it's a different, deliberate structure that spreads care, responsibility and belonging across far more people than a nuclear family ever could.

This is also why, traditionally, people are rarely called by their personal name alone. Someone might be known as so-and-so's son or so-and-so's mother, the relationship itself is part of how a person is recognised in the community.

Why the System Matters So Much

Kinship isn't just tradition for its own sake, it does real work. It gives every person a defined role and a place to belong from the moment they're born. It spreads the responsibility of raising children across many adults, not just two parents, so a child is never solely dependent on one household for guidance, support or care. It determines marriage rules, ceremonial obligations, and who holds the right to particular knowledge, stories and Country.

Research into Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander wellbeing consistently shows that strong family and kinship connection is one of the central pillars of social and emotional wellbeing, it's not just a cultural nicety, it's directly tied to health, identity and resilience. The reverse is also true and well documented: when kinship systems are disrupted, the damage runs deep and lasts generations.

Why Pwerle Gallery Is Built This Way

This is also why Pwerle Gallery exists the way it does. We're not a gallery that represents artists we found or signed - every artist we work with is our family. Our mothers, our grandmothers, our aunties, our cousins. The relationships that hold our gallery together aren't contracts. They're the same kinship responsibilities that have always existed in our family, just carried into how we share our art with the world today.

Related Reading

Read about our family's full story on The Gallery page. Learn more about skin names and how they connect to kinship. Read our Nanna's Stolen Generation story.

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