Cheeky Dog
Clip 3: Dion the artist
2 min 57 sec (
skip to teachers’ notes)
Taken from the documentary Cheeky Dog (2006)
Original title classification not known – this clip chosen to be G
Availability of the complete title
Please be aware that this clip may contain the names, images and voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who may now be deceased.
Curator’s clip description
Joie Boulter speaks about having Dion’s artwork applied to T-shirts as a way to raise funds. We see examples of Dion’s artwork now applied to T-shirts. All royalties raised from the merchandise are put into a trust fund for Dion. We hear from Dion’s family, grandfather John Beasley and Gloria Beasley, Dion’s aunty.
Curator’s notes
Dion’s obsession with dogs becomes the artwork of T-shirts and other merchandise, and the label ‘You Cheeky Dog’ is based on Dion’s work. It is interesting to see a young boy, with his simple outlook and his keen observations of canines, generate merchandise, the proceeds from which go into a fund to support him in the future. Effectively, Dion is an artist, and as his grandfather tells us, it is possible that drawing dogs will become his job.
Romaine Moreton, curator
Teachers’ notes
provided by The Le@rning Federation
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This clip shows an interview with Joie Boulter, the carer for Dion Beasley, a young Tennant Creek artist, talking about his art and the creation of the Cheeky Dog label to market his work. Her narration is illustrated with rapidly changing images of T-shirts decorated with Dion’s art, accompanied by techno music. Short interviews with Dion Beasley’s grandfather and aunt and a short scene of Dion with Joie and his sign language interpreter looking at a folio of his work intercut the main interview. The clip ends with a shot of the Cheeky Dog label. It includes subtitles.
Educational value points
- The clip provides an example of a relationship that has transformed the life of a severely disabled boy. Joie Boulter first encountered Dion Beasley when she was his teacher at Tennant Creek Primary School. She describes him as being a ‘very lonely little boy’, with no interaction with the outside world. While working with him she saw his talent as an artist. It is through her efforts that Dion’s work is now being marketed as Cheeky Dog Designs, providing money for his future.
- The clip reveals how Dion, who did not talk and used only a very basic sign language even with his family because of his profound deafness, has found a means of communicating with the wider world through his original and close observations of dogs, translated into drawings.
- The humour, variety and originality of Dion’s dog characters are evident in those that are featured in the clip. Darwin-based designer Stan Whiting, who was responsible for the creation of the Cheeky Dog label, saw their potential immediately. ‘He’s got a dog for every occasion and every product’, he said (http://www.abc.net.au). Whiting does not change the designs at all, merely cleaning up the lines so they are clear for screen printing.
- The pride in and support for Dion’s achievement from members of his family are revealed in the clip in the interviews to camera with Dion’s grandfather John Beasley and his aunt Gloria Beasley. They express their support for his work, with his grandfather reporting that he likes the drawings of the dogs and seeing people wearing Dion’s T-shirts. He expresses the hope that Dion might be able to continue drawing dogs as a job when he grows up.
- Although it is not evident in the clip, Dion has to deal with both profound deafness and muscular dystrophy. Muscular dystrophy is a neuromuscular disorder for which there is currently no cure. It causes progressive degeneration of the voluntary muscles, that is, the muscles that control the movements of the limbs, head, face, feet and hands. Dion is dealing with his deafness by learning Auslan, Australian sign language, with the assistance of a sign language interpreter.
- Dion Beasley’s designs have gained recognition and awards. In 2005 he received the Best Indigenous Memento Award. These awards showcase fresh, contemporary and commercially viable craft, art and design. He was also a finalist in the 2006 Northern Territory Young Achiever Awards. The Alice Springs Chamber of Commerce and Austrade have offered to help market Cheeky Dog Designs overseas and set up a website for Internet sales.
- An interesting example of narrative technique is provided by the clip. Dion’s story is told largely through his carer, Joie Boulter. The clip both begins and ends with Joie telling Dion’s story. Her narrative is intercut with interviews with his grandfather and aunt and shots using camera movement and techno music to convey the liveliness and originality of Dion’s T-shirt designs. The viewer never sees the interviewer or hears the questions asked.
- The clip is from the documentary Cheeky Dog (2006), one of more than 100 documentaries in the Nganampa Anwernekenhe series of television films whose guiding principle was to give voice to Indigenous peoples. Produced by the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA), the series’ aim was to preserve and promote Indigenous languages and cultures. Subjects ranged widely and included traditional law and culture as well as social issues and Aboriginal identity.







