Meet Brian “Binna” Swindley
“I don't do Dreamtime stories; I paint what is around me,” says Brian “Binna” Swindley, a proud Kuku Yalanji man and the owner of Janbal Gallery in the leafy town of Mossman, just outside Port Douglas.
"I paint food from the mudflats, stories about how to hunt for crabs, and cassowary footprints. That’s what is painted on our bodies for ceremonies, so that's what I put on my art,” he adds.
That might be so, but as soon as I walk through the tangerine doors and into the colourful womb that makes up Janbal Gallery, my eyes latch onto a triptych of suitcase-sized paintings of Yiki people. Against obsidian black canvases, these spirit people – revered for their protective powers – come with oversized anime style eyes and a Warhol shock of hair.
I simply must have one. But first I need to learn more about Binna.
Born deaf, Binna is the first to admit that it has not been easy for someone with a disability to run a business, let alone an Aboriginal art gallery on the doorstep of the world’s oldest rainforest.
“But I work very hard,” he says, as he recounts his life journey in a heartbeat of memories that meander from a childhood horsing around the Daintree Rainforest with an extended network of cousins, to two years at Cairns TAFE, to the present; juggling creativity and commerce at his 100% Aboriginal-owned gallery.