Specsavers launches new range of limited-edition frames in collaboration with sisters and Gurindji Waanyi contemporary Aboriginal artists, Sarrita and Tarisse King to support the work of The Fred Hollows Foundation.
The new limited-edition range will go on sale from 4th July with $25 from the sale of each frame going towards The Fred Hollows Foundation’s Indigenous Australia Program to help make eye care more accessible for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.
To date, Specsavers has contributed more than $7.6 million towards The Foundation’s programs in Australia. Now in its 13th year of the partnership and with this 8th limited-edition range, Specsavers and The Fred Hollows Foundation are working towards the mutual goal of closing the gap in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples eye health.
This year’s limited-edition range artists, Sarrita and Tarisse King, are second generation artists and the daughters of great indigenous artist William King Jungala.
Growing into prolific artists in their own right, Tarisse, based in NZ and Sarrita on Larrakia Country, Northern Territory, are always investigating other mediums to express their stories, which has resulted in a range of collaborations and public projects.
A collaboration between the sisters, this year’s limited-edition artwork, ‘My Country’s Story’, beautifully captures the diverse landscapes of Australia’s Top End, reflecting on the lives of families and communities who inhabit the land.