Lisa Bellear

Lisa (Marie) Bellear (2 May 1961 in Melbourne, Victoria 5 July 2006 in Melbourne) was an Indigenous Australian poet, photographer, activist, spokeswoman, dramatist, comedian and broadcaster.[2] She was a Goernpil woman of the Noonuccal people of Minjerribah (Stradbroke Island), Queensland. Her uncles were Bob Bellear, Australia's first Indigenous judge, and Sol Bellear who helped to found the Aboriginal Housing Corporation in Redfern in 1972.

Lisa Bellear
Publicity photo from The University of Queensland Press[1]
Born(1961-05-02)2 May 1961
Melbourne, Victoria
Died5 July 2006(2006-07-05) (aged 45)
Melbourne, Victoria
NationalityAustralian
Known forPoetry, Photography

Bellear was adopted into a white family as a baby and was told she had Polynesian heritage.[3] As an adult she explored her Aboriginal roots.[4]

Bellear died unexpectedly at her home in Melbourne. She was 45 years old.

Published works and photography

Bellear wrote Dreaming in Urban Areas (UQP, 1996), a book of poetry which explores the experience of Aboriginal people in contemporary society. She said in an interview with Roberta Sykes that her "poetry was not about putting down white society. It's about self-discovery."[5]

Other poetry was published in journals and newspapers. She was awarded the Deadly Awards prize in 2006 for making an outstanding contribution to literature with her play The Dirty Mile: A History of Indigenous Fitzroy, a suburb of Melbourne.

Bellear was a prolific photographer.[6] Her work was exhibited at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games and at the Melbourne Museum as part of their millennium celebrations.[7]

Community activities

Bellear was a broadcaster at the community radio station 3CR in Melbourne where she presented the show 'Not Another Koori Show' for over 20 years.

She was also a founding member of the Ilbijerri Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Theatre Co-op, the longest-running Aboriginal theatre troupe in Australia. Ilbijerri produced The Dirty Mile in March 2006 as a dramatised walking trail through the streets of Fitzroy, Melbourne.

Recognition

In 2008 Bellear was inducted posthumously to the Victorian Honour Roll of Women. The City of Melbourne in partnership with the Victorian Women's Trust recognised Bellear's life and work in 2018 in naming a laneway in Carlton, Warrior Woman Lane, after her.[8]

gollark: I can generally get the occasional hatchling for my 4G arrows.
gollark: 3G prize = occasional free eggs/hatchlings
gollark: 2G prize = infinite rareishes
gollark: 1G prize = infinite rares
gollark: Prizes, things which are something.

References

  1. "Author Lisa Bellear". The University of Queensland Press. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  2. Brown, Jen Jewel. "An inspiring, dynamic warrior woman". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  3. Winkler, Michael (7 July 2004). "Till many voices shake us". Melbourne: The Age, 7 July 2004.
  4. Roberta Sykes, 'The Stolen Generation', in American Book Review, vol.18 no.4 May–June 1997, pp 8-9.
  5. Roberta Sykes, op.cit.
  6. Harmon, Steph. "Lisa Bellear captures decades of Indigenous Australian protests – in pictures". The Guardian. Guardian Australia. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  7. "Vale Lisa Bellear" Archived 11 June 2009 at the Library of Congress Web Archives
  8. "The stories behind our street signs". Herald Sun. 2 November 2018.


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