Harold Thomas

Australian Aboriginal Artist



Designed The National Aboriginal flag. (Harold owns the copyright)





Harold Thomas

Born:     	    	      1947
Region:    	         Alice Springs, Western Desert
Community Centre:   Darwin
Language Bloc:      Western Desert
Language:     	      Luritja, Wombaya, 


Awards:
2016, WINNER, 33rd, Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Art Award NT Museum of Arts and Sciences, Darwin
1984, Third Prize, Inaugural National Aboriginal Art Award, Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, Darwin

Commissions:
1992, Portraits of Parliamentarians, Darwin NT

Collections:
Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.
Flinders University Art Museum, Adelaide.
Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.
Northern Territory Chief Ministers Department.
Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane.

Exhibitions:
Individual Exhibitions:
1968, Adelaide, solo exhibition, opened by Don Dunstan, SA
1977, Arnhemland Aboriginal Art Gallery, Darwin, NT
1978, Heritage Aboriginal Art Gallery, Darwin, NT
1985, Esplanade Gallery, Darwin, NT
1986, The Parap Gallery, Darwin, NT
1986, Raintree Gallery, Darwin, NT
1987, Birukmarri Gallery, Fremantle, WA
1987, Esplanade Gallery, Darwin, NT
1988, The Showcase Gallery, Darwin, NT
1988, Caz Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
1989, Masterworks Exhibition, Raintree Gallery, Darwin, NT

Group Exhibitions:
1984, The First National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and Art Gallery of NT, Darwin
1985, The Second National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and Art Gallery of the NT, Darwin
1990, Balance 1990: views, visions, influences, QAG, Brisbane.
1993, The Tenth National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and Art Gallery of the NT, Darwin

Harold Thomas - Creator of the Aboriginal Flag Broadcast 6.30pm on 25/3/2002

Harold Thomas is a noted Aboriginal activist and artist. One of his best known designs is the Aboriginal Flag.
This simple banner represents strength and passion and has become the emblem for Aboriginal Australians.

Harold Thomas, artist & designer of the aboriginal flag:

I was born in a small town called Alice Springs in the late-'40s or mid-'40s. And, uh, it was a beautiful place. But I only spent seven years of my life there and we lived in a segregated area called the Cottages where part-Aboriginals were to live in specially built houses called the Cottages. Whites lived in town. Bush people lived out on the missions and stations.

Well, I'm one out of 13 children. And now I have about 22 nieces and nephews, you know, and so forth. But, yeah, we've got a big family. But the sad thing about our family, we -- we weren't all housed under the same roof.

We were removed as children at different stages. The trauma of that as well as not seeing your mother again, virtually -- But I was fortunate -- I saw her once later on. But you know, your mother's love is the first great love that a person can have. First, I was institutionalised in Alice Springs with my sisters. I was fostered at 12 to a white family, a priest, a Church of England person, lovely people, until I was -- went to art school from there until I was about 20.

I've been involved with the stolen generation for the last seven or -- well, since it began in the Northern Territory. And that's an experience, to listen to other people's hardships. But that's helped me as well because I've never analysed it carefully or in detail, but being with other people who have been removed does help. But, yeah, it's, uh -- it's an ongoing thing about dealing with that. But it's not about blame or guilt or anything. It's about dealing with it, and hopefully, it will help, you know, my family, my children and that to understand what happened to their father.

But I made a decision about going to art school, because, I thought, "At least I won't be on my own, I won't have non-aboriginals telling me what to do." As an institutionalised person, that was really hard to come to terms with. But I persevered, and in the end I got my diploma of fine arts. And it was a great experience, because it was during the '60s, and during the period of change for a lot of young people throughout the world. And if I were to live again, I'd want to, because it was a great time for young people.

I applied for a job at the South Australian Museum, where I became the first Aboriginal to be employed in a museum in Australia. I was with the biggest collection of Aboriginal art -- artefact in the world, and I had virtually free access to it. So I gleaned over every artefact, every design. I sort of went back into it and felt, "There's something powerful and strong here that should be expressed."

So it went on from there -- it was a sequence of events which led to me being the designer of the Aboriginal flag. When I look carefully at what the Aboriginal flag looks like, it comes from the simplicity and power of Aboriginal art itself. Simple colour, choice of colour, and a simple design. It's powerful, and the colours are important. And it took some time to think about it -- Red ochre, the red soil -- the country of Australia is all red.

Why I chose the sun? Because it's another colour that is used commonly in Aboriginal art -- yellow ochre. But the sun is a great symbol for all people. When we look carefully at the colour black, which is an interesting one, it's more of a political inclusion, rather than a spiritual, Aboriginal concept. The black represents the pride of being black in Australia. Because, at the time, black pride came into Australian culture -- during the '60s and '70s -- influenced by Black American pride of their culture. If this is going to be an Aboriginal flag, it has to have black, because it represents the black people of the continent.

When we looked back, a lot of people were ashamed of their Aboriginal identity, because of that suppression. Well, the flag kind of helped that. They said, "At least, if I can wear it on myself, wear a T-shirt with it, or the colours, it's a signal to other people in the community I'm proud I'm Aboriginal, I'm proud to wear the colours." And that's important -- I like that. Now and again, I see a non-Aboriginal wear it, and that's even -- good too. I enjoy that. It's not just exclusively Aboriginal. It's got a life of it's own. It's everywhere.