This article argues that the inclusion of Indigenous Australian arts within federal cultural policymaking transitioned during the 1960s and 1970s from a salvage paradigm of value towards policies articulating self-determined Indigenous representation and the potential for a "healthy nationalism". The Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies (1964), the Aboriginal Arts Board (1973) and their joint proposal for a Gallery of Aboriginal Australia (1975) form the basis of this discussion and are representative of federal initiatives to "salvage", collect and promote Indigenous Australian culture within the national image. Despite commitments to controlling Indigenous representations as a "tribal" phenomenon, the late 1960s saw cultural nationa...