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Kmart to distribute NAIDOC Week posters

July 1, 2026

For the fourth consecutive year, Kmart is the official National NAIDOC Week Poster Distribution Partner, distributing the official poster from its stores across Australia.

As part of NAIDOC Week celebrations, the official artwork will be displayed in the windows of Kmart and K hub Deadly Stores, celebrating culture and community connection. To learn more about our Deadly Stores, click here.

This year’s National NAIDOC Week winning artwork is by Zaachariaha Fielding, an artist from the Mimili Community in the eastern APY Lands of South Australia.

Team Member Art Initiative

Each year, during NAIDOC Week Kmart takes the opportunity to celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures by amplifying the stories of our Kmart team members.

They invite team members to submit their artwork and stories to share what NAIDOC means personally, creating space for cultural expression, storytelling and connection across our business.

Winning artworks will be featured alongside the official National NAIDOC Week poster artwork across our Kmart Group Deadly Stores network during NAIDOC Week, recognising the creativity of our team and embracing our commitment to listening, learning and walking together.

Titled Paralpi, the artwork extends Zaachariaha’s acclaimed Inma series, presenting a powerful and immersive cultural narrative grounded in Country. The poster will be available in-store from 18 June 2026 until they run out.

Kmart 2026 Team Member Art Winner

Ceira’s artwork, Yunggul (Together) Through Time, reflects the 2026 NAIDOC Week theme, “50 Years of Deadly”, celebrating five decades of strength, resilience and the enduring culture of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

The Green Tree Frog (Girnggir) symbolises life, renewal and connection to Country, reflecting how culture adapts and thrives across generations. The surrounding circles, inspired by frog eggs and yarning circles, represent new life, community, shared knowledge and storytelling.

Together, these elements honour the passing of culture through kinship and learning, showing how it has endured and grown stronger over the past 50 years.

Peter Rowe

Peter Rowe leads First Nations News as Editor, with over three decades of experience across international newsrooms, digital platforms and media strategy roles. For the past 20 years, he’s worked in Australia – reporting, editing and advising on stories that shape public debate.

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