VoxFrockers Joy Zhang and Theadora Violet captured MFW’s exuberant kick-off runway a celebration of inclusivity, diversity and fashion for every human, woven into First Nations’ distinctive aesthetic, culture and story-telling. Scroll down to meet this talented VoxFrock crew up-close and click back daily here and here for roundups of MFW’s best bits by the future stars of fashion journalism and photography.

Words: Joy Zhang Photos: Joy Zhang and Theadora Violet
Ganbu Marra means ‘one mob’, a fitting title for Melbourne Fashion Week’s opening runway at One Hotel, a stirring collective vision fusing bold modernity with deep cultural memory. Collections by designers including Banbu, Gammin Threads, Goompi’s Girl, Jaru Girl, Kaninda, King King Creative, Yapa Mali, and Yarrenyty Arltere Artists combined in kaleidoscopic runway of Country, community, and couture; fashion as story, reclamation and sovereignty.

Outside, the humor that often underpins First Nations’ art and fashion was also being realised in versions of high spirited street-style. Unlike Paris Fashion Week where influencer twins might pin Hermès bags into their hair (yes!), these Australians do humor their own unique way; in this case with a dash of Keen’s curry and a wink of local flair.

Twenty year old model Brentisha Charles Macale (above) from Kimberley turned heads in her Gammin Threads, “Keen’s Blackfulla Curry” tee, a cheeky homage to the pantry icon and a powerful statement of identity. “’Fulla’ means ‘fellow’,” she winked, referencing the iconic yellow-and-orange label re-imagined with Blak humour, and added with a smile: “We love Keen’s Curry too; this T-shirt tells our story.”

For many Aboriginal people, Keen’s Curry holds a special place. (We are “Curry mates”!) Indian curry has become a beloved part of modern Blak households; a symbol of adaptation and Australian-ness, embracing alongside traditional bush curries. The spice’s bright tin sits proudly in kitchens across the country, a cultural crossover that Gammin Threads transforms into wearable wit.

Brentisha’s friend Sophia Chowdhury, of Sylheti and Bengali heritage, added; “Our model colleagues tonight are all colours, sizes and ages, even the models with vitiligo and disability mark the diversity of this country.

Back inside One Hotel, the runway space was transformed into a living landscape. Barefoot models walked across red earth, surrounded by installations of native flora and sculptural backdrops.

Outback cowboys and girls appeared in Akubra hats, Tjanpi earrings, dilly bags, and R.M. Williams boots, grounding luxury in legacy. A flash of humor arrived as one model carried a pink swim ring, part Bondi rescuer, part fashion satire and a reminder that Australian identity can be both profound and playful.

Art in motion! Injalak Arts and Ghost Net Art transformed their woven installations into contemporary statement tote bags, blurring the line between gallery and runway.

Yarrenyty Arltere Artists sent out models carrying hand-dyed soft sculptures, dreamtime creatures reborn in cotton and embroidery. The crowd fell silent. It was part fashion, part storytelling, and unforgettable. Some pieces made the audience laugh; uniquely Australian, cheeky, and profound.

One cotton sculpture, a hand-sewn eagle perched as if mid-flight, felt like our own tender, eco-conscious answer to Labubu: playful yet powerful.

First Nations elder and a member of the Stolen Generations, Veronica Rix Jones, said the evening marked a turning point. “I was born before 1967 and lost my mother when I was nine,” she said. “Before the Referendum and the Aboriginal Act, opportunities like this simply didn’t exist. Tonight, I feel proud; proud of how far we’ve come.”

Grounded in the colours of Country: ochre, eucalyptus, desert pink, ocean blue, the Ganbu Marra runway defined the week the week to come.

Amid political tension and cultural divide, it proved Melbourne’s fashion heart still beats with First Nations spirit, where the future of Australian style began.
Meet the VoxFrockers
Joy Zhang, photographer/journalist

Joy is a freelance photographer and creative entrepreneur, exploring multiculturalism and identity. Her exhibitions include Hues of Fiji 2024 (Sydney) and New Silk Road 2023 (Shanghai). Joy has worked at Paris and Copenhagen Fashion Weeks for brands like Zuhair Murad and Ganni, and Star TV/ESPN in Shanghai. Holding a Ph.D. in creative industries and Asian cinema, she also fosters collaborations between Australia and Asia, facilitating coproduction projects in the arts and film industries.
Theadora Violet, Photographer/Crew mentor





