Matt Chun

Matt Chun, previously known as Matthew Jones, is an Australian children's book illustrator and writer.

Works

Chun's books include Australian Animals, Australian Mammals, Australian Sea Life, Australian Birds, Day Break (with Amy McQuire), and the pop-up book Pull It Down. His work has been published in Overland, Meanjin, Liminal Magazine, and The Sunday Paper.[1][2] His books have been shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards,[3] the Children's Book Council of Australia Awards,[4] the Australian Book Design Awards,[5] and the Shirley Hannan National Portrait Award.[6]

In 2019, he was appointed Children's Literature Fellow at the State Library of Victoria in Melbourne.[7] He cut ties with the library in April 2024, citing political differences.[8]

Chun's artwork has been exhibited at the 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art,[9] the S.H. Ervin Gallery,[10] the Nishi Gallery in Canberra,[11] the Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre,[12] and the Wollongong Art Gallery.[13]

He has received a number of grants from Creative Australia, including in 2017 to attend an artist's residency at the Bamboo Curtain Studio in Taiwan[12] and in 2023 to develop a children's picture book about policing in Australia with writer Amy McQuire.[14][15]

Chun is a founding editor of The Sunday Paper, which he co-created in 2021 after calling for a boycott of Schwartz Media, the publisher of The Saturday Paper and The Monthly.[16][17]

Political views

In 2016 Chun's cafe in Bermagui, Mister Jones, attracted national media attention when its sign describing Australia Day as "National Dickhead Day" went viral on social media. Chun reported receiving death threats from people offended by the sign.[18][19]

Chun has called for boycotts of arts organisations including the National Gallery of Victoria, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, and the National Gallery of Australia, which he accuses of supporting Zionism, and of media outlets including the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and the Guardian Australia, which he has described as "enemy media".[20][21][22]

Chun described the 7 October attacks in Israel as "a courageous act of revolutionary decolonisation."[20][23] Soon after the attacks, he posted the message: "Power to the freedom fighters. Love to the martyrs. Death to the occupation. Resistance by any means necessary. Liberation from the River to the Sea."[24]

In February 2024, Chun, with Clementine Ford, Randa Abdel-Fattah, and others, published the leaked transcripts of a 600-member WhatsApp group for Jewish Australian writers, arts workers, and academics, along with a spreadsheet containing the names, occupations, social media profiles and photographs of group members and other Jewish creatives.[25][26][27] People listed in the spreadsheet and their families subsequently received death threats.[28][29] The incident was widely cited in public discussions of new doxing laws that were introduced in Australia in 2024.[30][25][31]

In August 2025, the Herald Sun reported that Victoria Police had received a letter from a former Victorian Director of Public Prosecutions asking it to investigate Chun for alleged terrorist activity. The police investigation concluded that there was insufficient evidence to press charges.[32]

Comments on Bondi shootings

On 14 December 2025, sixteen people (one gunman, eleven other men, three women, and a ten-year-old girl) were killed in a terrorist attack at Bondi Beach while attending a Hanukkah celebration organised by Chabad.[33] Two weeks later, Chun published an essay entitled "We Don't Mourn Fascists", criticizing public expressions of grief for the victims. He argued that such public mourning reflected "liberal capitulation" to "the Zionist propaganda machine", and criticized the lack of attention paid to Muslim and Indigenous victims of violence.[34][35][36][20] Chun wrote that the Bondi Hanukkah event was "hosted by the Zionist Jewish-supremacist organisation Chabad", which he accused of close connections to the Israel Defense Forces and of "actively, publicly, and extensively help[ing] to facilitate ... the imperialist holocaust of Palestine".[34] Responses to the essay were written by Nick Dyrenfurth in The Australian,[37] by Lillian Kline in the Australian Financial Review[38] and by Guy Rundle, Tim Dunlop and Omar Sakr on Substack.[39][40][41] Max J & Porco, writing in Communist Unity's Partisan! magazine, characterised Chun's politics as a "deeply nihilistic and paranoid form of 'anti-colonial' politics which is more concerned with moralist justifications for mass shootings than putting forward a positive program for the liberation of Indigenous peoples".[35]

Following the publication of Chun's essay, the hate crimes unit of the New South Wales Police Force were reported to be investigating his remarks.[42][43] Dymocks bookshops withdrew Chun's books from sale[44][45] and the University of Queensland Press (UQP) announced that it had suspended publication of Bila, a River Cycle, a children's picture book written by Wiradjuri poet Jazz Money and illustrated by Chun.[46][47] In April 2026, UQP confirmed that it would not be publishing Bila and that it planned to pulp the 5000 copies that had been printed.[48][49] Several UQP authors cut ties with the publisher in protest,[50] including Randa Abdel-Fattah, who described the publisher's decision as "shameful and cowardly" and added that the public could "see through the weaponisation of accusations of anti-Semitism to censor and punish voices that denounce and oppose [Israel]".[48]

During a federal Senate Estimates hearing in February 2026, Liberal senator Sarah Henderson asked the head of Creative Australia about its funding of Chun's work in light of his comments about the Bondi shooting.[51] In March 2026, Creative Australia said that it would not seek advice about recovering Chun's grants, as the funded work had been completed. The organisation said that it would seek to update its future contracts to allow termination of funding should a recipient engage in hate speech or racial or religious vilification.[52]

Personal life

Chun has a maternal great-grandfather from China and a Jewish grandmother. He says that he rarely "foregrounds" his heritage in his activism, due to his view that "identity politics" is often "counter-revolutionary".[53]

Chun was previously known as Matthew Jones.[54] He has written about his decision to adopt the surname of his ancestor Phillip Jo Chun, his great grandfather, who arrived in Australia from China in 1900.[55][56][55] After his parents divorced, Chun and his sister changed their names with their mother when she dropped their father's name and reversed to "Chun".[57]

Chun's partner is also his publisher at Slingshot Books, Tess Cullity.[58] His sister is the journalist and University of Melbourne academic Mell Chun.[56] He has a son.[55][1]

Books

Year Title Publisher
2021 Australian Animals Hardie Grant
2020 Australian Mammals Hardie Grant
2019 Australian Sea Life Hardie Grant
2018 Australian Birds Hardie Grant
2021 Day Break (with Amy McQuire) Hardie Grant
2024 Pull It Down Slingshot Books
2024 The Pull It Down Reader (with James Tylor) Slingshot Books
2021 Do You Ever Wonder? Decapod Press
2026 Bila: A River Cycle (with Jazz Money) University of Queensland Press (cancelled)

References

  1. ^ a b "Matt Chun". Hardie Grant. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
  2. ^ "The Sunday Paper, issue 3: Resistance". Slingshot Books. Retrieved 29 April 2026.
  3. ^ "2022 Book Awards Shortlist". ABIA. 23 May 2022. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  4. ^ McKnight, Albert (3 April 2019). "Matt Chun shortlisted in Children's Book Council of Australia Award 2019". Bega District News. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  5. ^ "The 73rd Australian Book Design Awards Shortlist". Australian Book Designers Association. 8 April 2025. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  6. ^ "Artist Matt Chun to represent shire in prestigious portrait award". Bega District News. 14 May 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2026.
  7. ^ "SLV announces 2019 fellowship recipients". Books+Publishing. 12 July 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
  8. ^ Ferguson, John (3 April 2024). "Matt Chun splits from State Library Victoria over Gaza views". The Australian.
  9. ^ "Matt Chun". 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2026.
  10. ^ "Salon des Refusés 2017". S.H. Ervin Gallery. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  11. ^ Pryor, Sally (26 February 2016). "Capital Life: What's on in Canberra's arts scene from February 26". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  12. ^ a b "Matt Chun". The Bamboo Curtain Studio. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  13. ^ "Exhibition opening: On the Move: The Dion Family". 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art. Retrieved 29 April 2026.
  14. ^ Yim, Noah (26 December 2024). "Revealed: the $42,000 taxpayer grant given to anti-Israel artist behind Jewish WhatsApp group leak". The Australian. Retrieved 3 January 2026.
  15. ^ Visontay, Michael (12 March 2026). "Illustrator Matt Chun's Grant Not Rescinded over Hate Speech". The Jewish Independent. Retrieved 15 March 2026.
  16. ^ Visontay, Michael (31 December 2021). "The occupation is unjust but that doesn't mean boycotts are justified". The Jewish Independent. Retrieved 4 April 2026.
  17. ^ "The Sunday Paper". Slingshot Books. Retrieved 4 April 2026.
  18. ^ Safi, Michael (28 January 2016). "NSW cafe's 'National Dickhead Day' sign sparks death threats and vandalism". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 April 2026.
  19. ^ Burgess, Katie (27 January 2016). "Bermagui cafe owner receives death threats after Australia Day sign goes viral". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 April 2026.
  20. ^ a b c Heller, Mathilda (3 January 2026). "Australian children's author defends Bondi shooting". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 9 April 2026.
  21. ^ Deery, Shannon (16 August 2025). "Extremist probed on terror allegations a year before wild NGV protest". Herald Sun. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  22. ^ Chun, Matt (13 January 2026). "They cannot be reformed, they must be abandoned". Matt Chun's Newsletter. Retrieved 24 April 2026.
  23. ^ Chun, Matt (5 December 2025). "'The smooth operation of business'". Matt Chun's Newsletter. Retrieved 24 April 2026.
  24. ^ Adno, Carly (14 February 2024). "PM backs ECAJ call for anti-doxxing laws". Australian Jewish News. Retrieved 25 April 2026.
  25. ^ a b Demetriadi, Alexi (9 February 2024). "Grant-funded author 'led leak of 600 Jewish creatives' details'". The Australian. Archived from the original on 11 March 2024. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  26. ^ Alexi, Demetriadi (15 February 2024). "Political and Jewish leaders raise Clementine Ford curatorship red flag after creatives doxxing". The Australian.
  27. ^ Demetriadi, Alexi; Ferguson, John (14 February 2024). "The faces of a hatred that has no place here". The Australian. Archived from the original on 7 June 2024. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  28. ^ Stone, Deborah (5 February 2024). "Death threats, boycotts target Jewish creatives". The Jewish Independent. Retrieved 29 March 2026.
  29. ^ Taylor, Josh (9 February 2024). "Publication of Jewish creatives WhatsApp group led to death threats, MP says". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 April 2026.
  30. ^ "'Doxxing' could be criminalised after hundreds of Jewish Australians' names and messages published". ABC News. 12 February 2024. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
  31. ^ Hurst, Daniel; Taylor, Josh (12 February 2024). "Albanese government to propose legislation to crack down on doxing". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 April 2026.
  32. ^ Deery, Shannon (15 August 2025). "Anti-Israel activist Matt Chun probed a year before NGV rally". Herald Sun. Melbourne. Retrieved 5 January 2026.
  33. ^ Doherty, Ben; Cassidy, Caitlin (25 May 2026). "Bondi beach gunmen shot 11 people within 30 seconds of opening fire, royal commission hears". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2 June 2026.
  34. ^ a b We don’t mourn fascists: Liberal capitulation and the Chabad shooting at Bondi at the Wayback Machine (archived 2026-01-01) — via Altman 2026
  35. ^ a b Porco, Max J (12 February 2026). "Matt Chun's Anti-Colonial Nihilism". PARTISAN!. Retrieved 2 April 2026.
  36. ^ Chun, Matt (1 January 2026). "We don't mourn fascists". Matt Chun's Newsletter. Retrieved 5 January 2026.
  37. ^ Dyrenfurth, Nick (25 April 2026). "The left's moral collapse on antisemitism has found its most grotesque expression". The Australian. Retrieved 11 May 2026.
  38. ^ Kline, Lillian (30 April 2026). "Cancelling authors can be good judgment, not censorship". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 11 May 2026.
  39. ^ Rundle, Guy (24 April 2026). "Colophon". Spec: Commentary. Retrieved 10 May 2026.
  40. ^ Dunlop, Tim (27 April 2026). "Grief and political clarity can coexist". The Future of Everything. Retrieved 10 May 2026.
  41. ^ Sakr, Omar (23 April 2026). "The Cultural Apartheid in Australia's Arts Continues". Omar Sakr Presents. Retrieved 10 May 2026.
  42. ^ "NSW Police investigate controversial artist over article downplaying the Bondi terror attack". Sky News. 7 January 2026. Retrieved 12 March 2026.
  43. ^ Ewe, Koh (24 April 2026). "UQP: Aboriginal children's book Bila pulled over illustrator's Bondi attack comments". BBC. Retrieved 25 April 2026.
  44. ^ Marcus, Caroline (29 January 2026). "Dymocks remove anti-Israel children's author Matt Chun from stores as police investigate apparent smearing of Bondi victims". Sky News. Retrieved 12 March 2026.
  45. ^ Klein, Rob (30 January 2026). "Dymocks drops author Matt Chun over antisemitic claims after Bondi". J-Wire. Retrieved 2 April 2026.
  46. ^ Cooper, Nathanael (1 February 2026). "Complaint made against UQP publisher Aviva Tuffield over potential conflicts of interest". The Daily Telegraph (Sydney). Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  47. ^ Bita, Natasha (30 January 2026). "Publisher suspends activist Matt Chun's book over 'Jewish victimhood' comments". The Australian.
  48. ^ a b Story, Hannah (23 April 2026). "Authors leave publisher after kids book scrapped for illustrator's comments". ABC News. Archived from the original on 19 May 2026. In a letter to UQP, published by Lamestream, Abdel-Fattah described the decision not to publish Bila as "shameful and cowardly" and suggested the swift reaction from authors could have been predicted, following the events at AWW and a similar author boycott at Bendigo Writers Festival.... She said the writing community and broader public could "see through the weaponisation of accusations of anti-Semitism to censor and punish voices that denounce and oppose [Israel]".
  49. ^ Altman, Dennis (23 April 2026). "UQP has cancelled a children's book illustrated by Matt Chun, citing antisemitism". The Conversation. Archived from the original on 19 May 2026. Bila: A River Cycle by Wiradjuri poet Jazz Money, illustrated by Matt Chun.
  50. ^ Story, Hannah (23 April 2026). "Authors leave publisher after kids book scrapped for illustrator's comments". ABC News. Retrieved 23 April 2026.
  51. ^ Bailey, Michael (11 February 2026). "Shouting match over Higgins doco at Senate hearing". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
  52. ^ Visontay, Michael (12 March 2026). "Matt Chun's hate speech prompts change in arts funding policy". The Jewish Independent. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
  53. ^ Chun 2025 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFChun2025 (help): "Zionists might also be rattled to learn that my grandmother was Jewish. But I never foreground that aspect of my heritage either. To weaponise it would be disingenuous... Identity politics — with the obvious exceptions of Indigenous and national liberation struggles — is frequently counter-revolutionary."
  54. ^ Langton, Marcia (27 January 2025). "No excuse for allowing Jewish hate to fester on our campuses". The Australian.
  55. ^ a b c Chun, Matt (22 August 2021). "Safe Passage". 4A Papers. Archived from the original on 5 February 2026. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
  56. ^ a b Chun, Matt (28 January 2025). "A personal note on identity". Matt Chun's Newsletter. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
  57. ^ Chun 2025 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFChun2025 (help): "My great-grandfather, Phillip Jo Chun, arrived on Aboriginal Land from China... When our parents divorced, my sister Mell and I both dropped our Dad’s surname and, along with our Mum, reverted to Chun."
  58. ^ Breslin, Connor; Fishlock, Holly (8 August 2025). "October 7 supporter's visa cancelled after Coalition called for Tony Burke to step down over approval". Sky News Australia. Retrieved 20 March 2026.

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