We produce purpose-driven content and creative projects for social change.
Working across film, photography, music, digital art and events, we translate lived experience into stories that challenge, connect and mobilise.
We collaborate with women and girls, children and young people, First Nations communities and highly experienced artists and producers.
Our projects:
Everything we do is grounded in trusted partnerships and systems thinking.
Sister-in-Law Dreaming is an exhibition of photography celebrating women’s everyday leadership - exploring the enduring and radical power of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander matriarchy. It is inspired by stories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women leaders, and their ongoing stewardship of Country, community and culture - grounded in nurture and collective care.
Sister-in-Law Dreaming has grown from the Punkaliyarra project, a long-term, intergenerational women’s initiative developed in Ieramugadu (Roebourne, Western Australia). Punkaliyarra is a story about kinship and heritage, a story acknowledging women’s continuous connection to country and all that it holds.
Photographers:
Jessica Allan @jessallan_photography
Nic Duncan @nic_duncan_photographer
Rachel Mounsey @rachel_mounsey_
Delivered in collaboration with the Wiyi Yani U Thangani Institute for First Nations Gender Justice and original producing organisation Big hART, the exhibition is possible thanks to the support of Nelson Meers Foundation and Women Deliver 2026.
Create Justice is working with Wiyi Yani U Thangani First Nations Gender Justice Institute, supporting their multi-year work elevating First Nations women’s knowledges and peacebuilding efforts through artistic documentation and content creation.
Arts Program Producer - Festival of Dangerous Ideas 2026
Create Justice is producing an ambitious slate of artistic works for the 2026 Festival of Dangerous Ideas. Through a curated program of multidisciplinary projects spanning performance, dance, immersive and visual arts, the artistic program sits alongside the festival’s hallmark talks and ideas program, provoking critical dialogue, actively engaging audiences and catalysing cultural and policy conversation.
Genevieve Dugard - Genevieve’s pathway into social justice is shaped by a background in design, applied in layered community projects. Across 25+ yrs, she has delivered diverse arts projects in intercultural contexts at varying scales nationwide. In senior leadership, with roles across producing, management and creative direction, her last decade of work has centred on family violence prevention and gender justice for First Nations women and girls.
Sophia Marinos - is a cultural strategist and creative producer, with long-term experience delivering multi-platform projects, social impact documentaries and programs that elevate cultural authority and community voice. Her practice is grounded in relational, place-based collaboration, First Nations self-determination and arts-led impact. Skilled in campaign development, stakeholder engagement and guiding complex place-based projects from concept to legacy, she is passionate about connecting people, amplifying cultural knowledge, and shaping more equitable futures.