News | Living & Travel
22 Nov 2025 17:38
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Living & Travel

    How fashion designer Paul McCann reimagines the Indigenous debutante ball

    Marrithiyel artist and designer Paul McCann traces past, present, and imagined futures of the Indigenous debutante tradition

    Treena Clark, Chancellor’s Indigenous Research Fellow, Faculty of Design and Society, University of Technology Sydney
    The Conversation


    Michael Currie/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are advised that the following article contains images and voices of deceased persons.


    Marrithiyel artist and designer Paul McCann defines fashion as armour. Wearing his own creations allows him to feel protected while centring culture and claiming presence.

    McCann describes himself as having “faboriginal flair,” a phrase that captures both the playful and cultural essence of his work.

    His celebrated gumnut dress embodies this approach of translating cultural motifs into high fashion. Worn by Gamilaroi and Dunghutti drag queen Felicia Foxx at Australian Fashion Week 20221, the gown was a moment of spectacle and subversion on the runway.

    It is through this same lens that McCann traces past, present, and imagined futures of the Indigenous debutante tradition in Warrnambool Art Gallery’s new exhibition The Regional.

    The start of debutante balls

    In 1780 England, King George III hosted a ball for his wife Queen Charlotte in honour of her birthday and as a fundraising event. Young women of the elite curtsied to the queen, who stood by a giant birthday cake.

    As these annual balls continued, the young women were also presented to society to signal marriage eligibility and social season readiness.

    These balls eventually formalised the tradition of debuts and spread to the colonies. Arriving in Australia, they were presided over by the Governor and later the Governor-General of Australia.

    In the mid-20th century, Indigenous communities took on these traditions and updated them with cultural meanings. One such way was decorating the room and themselves with cultural designs such as boomerang bouquets.

    These Indigenous debutante balls claimed presence, resilience and cultural practice. They were especially significant in regional areas, where racism was an everyday reality.

    Against this backdrop, the first Indigenous debutante ball in Naarm/Melbourne in 1949 carried particular weight. Many of the young women presented to Sir George and Lady Knox had travelled from country districts.

    In 1952, McCann’s own grandmother Elizabeth was presented to Bishop John Patrick O'Loughlin at St Mary’s Club in Garamilla/Darwin.

    These early, often regional, events laid the groundwork for what would become an evolving and political occasion in the years to follow.

    A political and empowering experience

    From the mid-1960s, Indigenous debutante balls became more formal and structured. They also often served as community fundraisers, particularly for regional Indigenous communities.

    The NSW Foundation for Aboriginal Affairs’ 1968 Warrane/Sydney debutante ball marked a turning point. The 1968 ball was highly political, shaped by both Indigenous and white activists and politicians, including Prime Minister John Gorton.

    Held just seven weeks after the successful 1967 referendum, which acknowledged First Nations people as equal citizens, the ball was described by the media as “the symbolic coming out of all Aboriginal people”.

    Some Indigenous community members saw this ball as empowering. Other members criticised it as promoting white ideals. Many young Indigenous people remembered it simply as a night to be together and celebrate.

    For the debutantes, it was not just a social occasion, but a personal and a radical declaration of presence. Indigenous women have consistently experienced a disproportionate amount of violence and abuse, and the debutante balls partly functioned as acts of resistance.

    The event also offered the debutantes a chance to celebrate their beauty as Indigenous women and feel like a “little black princess”.

    Reimagining the balls

    Today, debutante balls have evolved to reflect diverse experiences and communities.

    Many contemporary Indigenous balls honour both young women and men equally. Gender-diverse and queer communities are carving out their own versions.

    These reworkings show how various communities are reshaping debutante balls into spaces of identity, belonging and celebration.

    McCann’s work weaves the lineage of debutante balls from their early origins, through mid-century Indigenous versions, to contemporary reinterpretations.

    A deeply personal reference in the exhibition is McCann’s grandmother, Elizabeth, and the recreation of her 1950s debutante gown.

    He discovered her debutante history through photographs and clippings. This connection leads the exhibition through both personal and collective Indigenous histories.

    Alongside this reimagined piece, the exhibition showcases McCann’s signature Indigenous glamour in his existing gowns. These contemporary debutante dresses retain the colonial, white tradition yet are culturally updated with Indigenous designs.

    His tailored men’s jackets extend this reinterpretation, highlighting the role of the male partners and celebrating diverse expressions of identity.

    McCann’s exhibition weaves through time and space, envisioning both what Indigenous debutantes might have worn in the past and what they could wear in the years ahead.

    Honouring the past, present and future

    McCann’s work in The Regional opens up conversations about colonial and reimagined debutante scenes. It also reflects on family loss and honouring legacies.

    Developed with architects Studio Bright, the exhibition space evokes a ballroom, immersing visitors in McCann’s cultural, historical and personal world.

    Velvet curtains, dramatic lighting, mannequins, and Indigenous-painted plinths honours both historical and contemporary Indigenous debutante traditions.

    This transformed ballroom space offers visitors a chance to feel the glamour and magic of being centre stage. To reimagine the debutante ball as a place of belonging, beauty, and cultural practice.

    In doing so, McCann reminds us fashion operates as both a story and armour for many people and communities, notably the Indigenous debutantes such as his grandmother.


    This is an edited extract from Treena Clark’s essay on Paul McCann’s exhibition in The Regional, commissioned by the Warrnambool Art Gallery. The Regional is on now.

    The Conversation

    Treena Clark has received funding through the University of Technology Sydney Chancellor’s Indigenous Research Fellowship scheme.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Living & Travel News
     22 Nov: A recall notice has been issued for a children's toy because of choking fears
     22 Nov: Air New Zealand cabin crew are calling for better pay and working conditions as they prepare to strike next month
     22 Nov: If you thought Christmas was quickly creeping up on us - you would be right .... the Auckland Christmas tree will be lit up tonight to kick off the holiday season
     21 Nov: A group of Special Olympians is the latest to test Christchurch's new Parakiore metro sports centre - ahead of its official opening
     21 Nov: A warning that the addition of feral cats to the Predator Free 2050 list, could get complicated
     20 Nov: Breakers forward Reuben Te Rangi believes there's sufficient training in place for athletes when it comes to gay rights
     19 Nov: All Blacks wing Caleb Clarke insists they've tried to tap into Aussie Rules to improve their high ball catching
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Wallace Sititi is imploring his side to sign off 20-25 on a high More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Meat exports have reached a record high, despite Donald Trump's recently-scrapped tariffs More...



     Today's News

    Health & Safety:
    A recall notice has been issued for a children's toy because of choking fears 17:26

    Entertainment:
    The Simpsons writer Dan McGrath has died at the age of 61 17:25

    Politics:
    European cars could become cheaper in EU trade deal 17:06

    Rugby:
    Wallace Sititi is imploring his side to sign off 20-25 on a high 16:56

    Basketball:
    Breakers centre Rob Loe has revealed his ties to basketball ahead of tonight's NBL clash with the Taipans in Cairns 16:56

    Entertainment:
    Paris Hilton has claimed she is "self-made" 16:55

    Rugby:
    Not only is starting a rugby test largely unfamiliar for All Blacks prop Pasilio Tosi, he's feeling a little nervous at the prospect 16:26

    Entertainment:
    Kris Jenner hopes to keep working for several more years 16:25

    Education:
    'Sorry New Zealand, love you': The record number of Kiwis leaving the country 16:06

    Entertainment:
    Adam Sandler is grateful for his "very cool life" 15:55


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd