Beneath Roads
Highlights
- Explore Indigenous walking paths and trading routes that predate modern roads, deepening your understanding of Australia's cultural heritage.
- Experience a unique three-channel exhibition that juxtaposes archival films with contemporary Indigenous narratives, enriching your cinematic perspective.
- Engage with the legacy of First Peoples through the lens of iconic Australian road movies, revealing untold stories of connection.
- Visit the family-friendly venue in Lilydale, featuring a café and gift shop, perfect for a relaxed day out.
An ACMI Production, developed by Jenna Rain Warwick.
The road movie is central to Australian cinema. Whether it’s the Ford Falcon hooning down the highway in Mad Max or hoofs pounding the highlands in The Man from Snowy River, traversing the country reflects a sense of adventure and national advancement.
But beneath the roads connecting the country are Indigenous walking paths and trading routes, from the Omeo Highway to the Bicentennial and Birdsville tracks, that have existed long before cities or cinema. These passages were often exploited to transport natural resources, connect infrastructure and progress colonialism. Historical accounts often reframe them as stockmen or cattle routes, denying First Peoples knowledges and legacy.
The Australian road movie has had a similar effect on our cultural consciousness, symbolising freedom and control over a perceived harsh land. It has become a cinematic trope and cultural export, a celebration of progress that excludes First Peoples relationship to these vital navigational networks.
Beneath Roads is a three-channel work that reveals the Indigenous experience and innovation underlying our national identity. By juxtaposing archival government films, iconic Australian road movies and newly captured footage of the Aboriginal motorcycle club, The Southern Warriors, Beneath Roads reinserts First Peoples knowledge legacies and representation into the cinematic canon, recontextualising the relationship to history, culture and Country.
Images and Video
Dates & times
- Next occurrence: reoccurring
Features
Actively welcomes people with access needs.