NAIDOC Week 2026 poster titled 'Paralpi' by the artist Zaachariaha Fielding.
At The Fair Trader, we are honoured and respectfully share the story and artistry of Zaachariaha Fielding, a talented Yankunytjatjara artist and musician from Mimili in the APY Lands.

As the lead singer of Electric Fields, Zaachariaha has made a significant impact through his creative work, and we warmly congratulate him on winning the 2026 National NAIDOC Week Poster Competition with his remarkable piece, Paraulpi.
From naidoc.org.au:
Zaachariaha Fielding is a proud Yankunytjatjara man from the APY Lands in South Australia and is widely recognised as one of the country’s leading contemporary First Nations artists and musicians. Known internationally through the acclaimed music duo Electric Fields, his work brings together language, sound, visual storytelling and culture in deeply powerful and contemporary ways.
Paralpi reflects movement, energy and continuity, carrying the stories of Ancestors forward while celebrating the creativity and cultural power of the next generation. Rich in colour and symbolism, the artwork speaks to the enduring strength of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples over the past 50 years of NAIDOC and beyond.
Through this work, Zaachariaha honours the resilience of community, the importance of language and identity, and the ongoing cultural renaissance being led by First Nations peoples across the country and across the APY Lands.
Zaachariaha Fielding said:
“Paralpi is about movement — movement through generations, through memory, through song and story. It speaks to the strength our people carry and the beauty of culture continuing to evolve while staying deeply connected to who we are.”
National NAIDOC Co-Chair Steven Satour said the work captures the essence of this year’s milestone celebration.
“Fifty years of NAIDOC Week represents fifty years of visibility, resistance, pride and deadly achievement. Zaachariaha’s work feels both deeply cultural and unmistakably contemporary — which is exactly what NAIDOC represents today. It honours where we’ve come from while boldly stepping into the future.”
‘The 2026 National NAIDOC Poster incorporating the Aboriginal Flag and the Torres Strait Islander Flag (licensed by the Torres Strait Island Council).
50 Years of Deadly
For five decades, NAIDOC Week has celebrated the voices of our communities — steady, unapologetic, and proud. Each year, its themes have called for truth, celebrated culture, honoured resistance, and reminded the nation of who we are.
References
https://www.sbs.com.au/learn/know-your-power-zaachariaha-fielding/
https://www.naidoc.org.au/posters/poster-gallery/2026-national-naidoc-week-poster
Copyright
Except where otherwise noted, the 2026 NAIDOC Poster is provided under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-N4 4.0).
Zaachariaha Fielding, a Yankunytjatjara artist and musician from the APY Lands, created the official 2026 National NAIDOC Week poster, Paralpi. His work is recognised internationally through the music duo Electric Fields, where he weaves together language, sound, visual storytelling and culture.
Paralpi embodies movement and continuity, honouring Ancestral stories while celebrating the creativity of new generations. The artwork's rich colours and symbolism reflect the enduring strength of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples throughout NAIDOC's 50-year journey. Through this piece, Fielding acknowledges community resilience, the power of language and identity, and the cultural renaissance led by First Nations peoples across Australia and the APY Lands.
Sources: SBS Learn and NAIDOC.org.au