Ur Wayii (Incoming Tide)
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Torres Strait artist Brian Robinson uses painting, printmaking, sculpture and design to encompass the region’s mythology, cosmology and spirituality. Robinson, who grew up on Waiben (Thursday Island), incorporates contemporary icons taken from video games and Hollywood movies to reflect on Islander history, humour and love of fishing.
Ur Wayii (Incoming Tide) is a multi-disciplinary exhibition spanning printmaking, sculpture, video and graphic design, it is a complex tapestry woven from traditional knowledge, historical narratives, and a keen engagement with the contemporary globalised world.

Saul Steed
Biography
About Zenadth Kes (Torres Strait)
Torres Strait Islanders come from the tropical north, where the Coral and Arafura Seas meet, and is known to locals as Zenadth Kes. It is in one of the world’s most fragile and intricate waterways.
Zenadth is an amalgamation of traditional language words which services the area’s geography and hints at its beauty, and Kes means passage.
Ze = Zey = South
Na = Naygay = North
D = Dagam = Place
Th=Thawathaw = Coastline
The Strait is a narrow waterway between the land masses of Zey Dagam Dhawdhay [Australia] in the south and Naygay Dagam Dhawdhay [Papua New Guinea] in the north.
The indigenous people of this place were once the Vikings of the tropics – builders of boats, explorers of ocean and experts in the navigational use of stars.
They remain attuned to all manner of heavenly and earthly gifts, as their spirituality is derived from ancestral ties to the land, the sea and the sky.
They named most of the constellations and identified them with the heroic, the beautiful, the fantastic, and the monstrous characters that featured in their epic myths and legends.
This knowledge is passed on to younger generation. These lessons are interwoven through spiritual beliefs, songs, dances, stories and dance paraphernalia.
These stories still live.


James Henry