April Phillips is a Wiradjuri-Scottish woman of the Galari/Kalari peoples. April is Curator at the National Portrait Gallery, and exhibition curator of Super Kaylene Whiskey. Over the past decade, April has contributed to arts programs, interpretation, advocacy, education and policy. She is a board associate for A New Approach and has participated in peer assessment boards and industry leader roundtables with Creative Australia. April has worked in numerous creative and advisory roles including for the Australian Children’s Television Foundation, Telstra Foundation, National Association of the Visual Arts and various museums and galleries across Australia.
					
										Natalie King OAM is a curator, writer and Enterprise Professor of Visual Arts at the University of Melbourne. She is the editor of Kaylene Whiskey: Do You Believe in Love?, published by Thames & Hudson in 2025. Natalie has curated three national pavilions at the Venice Biennale: Maria Madeira: Kiss and Don't Tell, the inaugural Timor-Leste Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale 2024; Yuki Kihara: Paradise Camp, Aotearoa New Zealand at the 59th Venice Biennale 2022 and Powerhouse Museum, Sydney 2023; and Tracey Moffatt: My Horizon, Australian Pavilion, the 57th Venice Art Biennale 2017. She is President of AICA-Australia (International Association of Art Critics, Paris) and she has contributed to numerous publications including Phaidon books, Flash Art International, LEAP, Ocula and Art + Australia.
					
										Clothilde Bullen OAM is a Wardandi and Badimaya curator, writer and advocate, and the Manager of Art, Culture and Collections at Edith Cowan University. Previously, Clothilde was the Senior Curator and Head of Indigenous Programs at the Art Gallery of Western Australia, and the inaugural Senior Curator First Nations Art at Sydney's Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. Clothilde was Chair of the Board of the National Association for the Visual Arts and has won awards for her curated exhibitions and publications, including a recent AAANZ publication award, and two Museum and Galleries NSW exhibition awards. In May 2025 Clothilde was awarded an Order of Australia medal for Services to Indigenous Art.