Amelia Jean O’Leary is a proud queer First Nations Gamilaroi & Wadawurrung Yinarr dance artist and storyteller based in Sydney.
Her multidisciplinary practice transforms movement into poetry, drawing on cultural lineage, lived experience, and spiritual connection to create work that is intimate, coded, and resonant.
Working across dance, choreography, dramaturgy, film, and sound, O’Leary creates physically rigorous, narrative-driven performances that sit between personal memory and collective experience.
Since graduating from VCA (2021), she has emerged as a fearless voice in contemporary performance, presenting work nationally and internationally. Her practice is urgent, luminous, and unapologetically First Nations and queer.



Rona is a proud Kaytetye woman from Central Australia who works with high impact organisations to create systems that centre First Nations people, knowledge and solutions.
Rona is the founder of Common Ground and brings 7 years
of professional experience working across First Nations organisations and not for profits. Rona was previously the Director of First Nations at YLab, a social enterprise that puts young people with diverse lived experiences at the centre of designing and developing innovative and impactful solutions
to complex social issues. Over her career, Rona has worked in policy at the Central Land Council, the Research Unit for Indigenous Languages at the University of Melbourne, Reconciliation Victoria, and the Foundation for Young Australians.In 2020, Rona was a finalist for the Victorian Young Achiever awards, was awarded a Westpac Social Change Fellowship. In 2019 Rona won a Diana Award and was named a 'Woman of the Future' by Women's Weekly.Through her work with First Nations communities across Australia, Rona aims to create future systems that centre First Nations people, knowledge and cultures.Rona currently resides in Mpartnwe on Arrernte Country.