Uniting through footy
The overall message of this design is about community spirit and the coming together of all aspects of AFL football in South East Queensland. Depicted within this artwork are representations of both males and females, the three regions in which SEQ football umpire and play under and the Sand Goanna, the totem of the local language group in which the AFL Queensland building is built on at Yeronga. The title, ‘Uniting through Footy’ is an overall summary of the story behind the design. It is bringing together men and women, players and umpiring through the collaboration of the artwork.
The Sand Goanna – is the totem for the first inhabitants of Yeronga, the Jagera People. Yeronga is a place of significance as this is where the AFL Queensland building is based. Gathering places – the three gathering places that surround the totem, represent each region in South East Queensland that football is umpired and played on. From the Sunshine Coast, through Brisbane and all the way to the Gold Coast/Northern Rivers, footballers and umpires come from each of these regions. Man campfire – men are represented in Indigenous artwork by an inverted “U” shape which represents the mark in which a person would live on the ground if they were sitting on the dirt of the earth, while the spears are hunting tools they would use for hunting. Women campfire – women are represented in Indigenous artwork by an inverted “U” shape which represents the mark in which a person would live on the ground if they were sitting on the dirt of the earth, while the digging stick represents a digging stick, a sharp tool that is used to dig out bush tucker. Written by Jacob Severs, a Kamilaroi man |