Two works of the significant 19th century Wurundjeri artist and Elder William Barak will be sold at auction next week in New York.
The pieces, an ochre drawing of a dance ceremony and a hand-carved parrying shield, are expected to sell for a significant sum, with previous auctions fetching up to half a million dollars for similar works.
In response, the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Cultural Heritage Corporation have launched a GoFundMe campaign in the hopes of raising enough money to successfully bid for the works.
Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin, a descendant of Barak's, said the two works are Wurundjeri cultural heritage that had to be returned to Country.
"[Barak's work] is all about story telling," she told NITV News.
"He wanted to make it clear to people, during colonisation, that these are the ceremonies that exist, and they are significant.
![Joy wandin](https://images.sbs.com.au/drupal/nitv/public/20110524000320324381-original.jpg?imwidth=1280)
Wurundjeri Elder Aunty Joy Murphy-Wandin poses for a photo in front of a collection of 19th and 20th century shields at the NGV. Source: AAP
"We're so fortunate to be able to be connected and belong to such an important person, a man of high stature."
Uncle Ron Jones, treasurer with the Wurundjeri Corporation, said the impending sale was an emotional issue.
“History should be returned back to us - the Wurundjeri people," he said.
"Bring Barak’s art home.”
Raising the necessary funds to buy the works will not be easy: they are estimated to have a combined worth of $1,000,000 dollars.
A similar campaign in 2016 was ultimately unsuccessful. Another drawing by Barak, which the Wurundjeri consider their 'Bible', set a record when it sold for over $500,000 dollars, leaving the artist's people "shattered" that they were unable to beat the sum.
![Sotheby's employee Anne Wall admires a n](https://images.sbs.com.au/drupal/nitv/public/gettyimages-88918632.jpg?imwidth=1280)
A Sotheby's employee views the painting 'Corroboree' by Wurundjeri artist William Barak. Source: AFP
Barak was a leader and lore man who defended Aboriginal land rights and organised resistance to ever-encroaching dispossession, notably at Coranderrk in the late 1800s.
It was at Coranderrk, when Barak was already in his sixties, that he turned his hand to art, producing a number of accomplished works across several media which can now be found in prestigious institutions across the world.