Women’s Voices

Verified Artist Certificate of Authenticity Included
A$11,050

Artwork Details

Medium Acrylic, Canvas, Ready to hang
Dimensions 122cm (W) x 152.5cm (H) x 3.5cm (D)
Review Stars 21,229 Customer Reviews

Indigenous Art Code

As a member of the Indigenous Art Code Bluethumb is proud to have established direct partnerships with some of Australia's most respected First Nation's artists and art centres.


Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
Free Shipping Australia Wide
Return it for free within 7 days

Artwork Description

Women’s Voices is the centre piece that has inspired me to begin my art and healing journey.

This piece captures the Women’s Voices project as a whole.

It features the ten types of landscapes I broadly came across traveling the country to listen to and elevate the voices of women and girls.

From pink salt flats, to deep red and orange earth, clay plains, lush scrub and rainforests, freshwater river lands and the salt water islands. The reflective dashes represents the individual voices of every woman and girl I heard from.

This painting is the largest in my series of painting to elevate the voices and experiences of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and girls.

It is a constant visual reminder of the fifty communities visited and the number of women and girls reached.

It reminds me of the incredible power our women and girls have when we come together to share our strengths and develop our own solutions to the challenges in our lives on our own terms.

Artist Bio

My name is Samantha, and I’m a proud Torres Strait Islander woman with ancestral connections to both the Eastern and Central Islands, as well as Kiwi and Scottish ancestry. I was born on the mainland on Turrbal/Yuggera Country and raised on Kaurna Yerta.

My paintings are a contemporary expression of my deep connection with First Nations peoples across many countries. Each piece reflects the relationships, stories, and truths I’ve gathered through my journey.

I’ve had the privilege of visiting over 70 communities across Australia and listening to thousands of people share their lived experiences with me. These stories nourish my soul and deepen my connection to the rich and complex fabric of this nation.

But listening also carries weight. Time and time again, I’m reminded of the ongoing inequities our people face — legacies of colonisation still embedded in our systems and institutions.

My art emerged as a form of healing. Taught to me by healers in different parts of the country, these techniques became a way to process the vicarious trauma I was absorbing while engaging with communities across areas like health and wellbeing, education, child protection, incarceration, domestic and family violence, employment, and justice.

Through repetition and rhythm, these artistic methods calm my mind and allow me to fully process what I’ve heard. Each piece is part of my healing — keeping me strong, grounded, and able to continue fighting for our rights and elevating community voices in my professional life.

Every artwork I create is inspired by a real story — a moment, a voice, a truth I carry with me — and each one stands as a powerful reminder of the collective hope we share for a better future.