Junction Arts Festival

Festival branding rooted in Princes Square’s cultural pathways and shared energy.

Created for Junction Arts Festival, this design honours Princes Square as a contemporary meeting place with deep cultural roots. Long used by the Tasmanian Aboriginal community for gatherings and yarning, the site inspired a circular composition reflecting knowledge-sharing, memory, and movement. Four radiating paths acknowledge the park’s current layout while evoking our cultural pathways. The layered line work celebrates the creative energy exchanged during festivals and the communal spirit that defines both the event and the place.

Client: Junction Arts Festival
Project Type: Branding & Marketing, Digital Illustration
Location: Launceston, Tasmania
Year: 2022

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Caleb Nichols-Mansell

Caleb Nichols-Mansell moves between Country, culture, and contemporary practice — weaving stories from land, spirit, and community into powerful visual languages. As a proud Palawa man, Caleb's work bridges the ancient and the evolving, reimagining Aboriginal knowledge systems through design, public art, and digital storytelling.

His practice is rooted in Country and carried forward through site-responsive interventions, graphic and surface design, and large-scale public commissions. Through intricate textures, flowing linework, and bold organic forms, Caleb invites reflection on identity, resilience, and the enduring strength of Palawa people.

His works have been commissioned by leading institutions across Australia, including MONA, University of Tasmania, Arts Tasmania, Australian Fashion Week, Lifeline Australia, and the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra; embedding stories of survival, connection, and contemporary Aboriginal identity into the cultural, public, and built environment.

www.calebnicholsmansell.com.au

https://www.calebnicholsmansell.com.au
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