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Is your loved one missing? See our dedicated site with advice, a checklist and templates.
Sadly, all many people get to know about the people reported missing every day are their vital statistics. Over time, it’s distressing to see your loved one repeatedly reduced to their name, height and date of birth.
We wanted to give families the chance to share more about them in an effort to engage the public and reignite the search.
In 2016, eight families were paired with authors and artists who generously donated their time and talent to write short stories about and create original artworks for their missing loved ones: Too Short Stories. Excerpts from the stories were incorporated into the artworks and installed in the locations where they were last seen, for National Missing Persons Week (NMPW).
The following year, based on the response, the stories – along with the artworks – were published in a beautifully designed hardcover book that was stocked in a number of renowned bookstores across Australia during NMPW.
Grab yourself one!
With tremendous support and encouragement from the families, authors and artists involved, a third iteration of the initiative was born. Writers interviewed families and created 100-word micro-stories that captured the essence of the missing loved one. Once approved, they were then shared with artists who designed, painted and installed artworks across the country.
In 2018, we adapted the concept to a modern take on the old milk carton campaigns of the 80s; coffee cups. Over 2018-19, we stocked some of the most popular cafes in Australia (including venues like the MCG) with our biodegradable cups, getting the issue into the mainstream.
In 2019, we were approached by production company Film Camp to create an ABC series capturing the process of making long term missing Australians ‘unmissable’. The journey follows three families – paired with muralist Joel Moore (AKA Vans the Omega), sculptor Pimpisa Tinpalit and a singer-songwriter Jess Ribeiro, respectively – as their loved one’s essence is depicted artistically. Watch The Unmissables docuseries teaser here.
Later that year, we were approached by the host and producer of internationally acclaimed podcast, Casefile. They offered us our own series, and suggested the initial season be based on the book, Too Short Stories (the precursor to The Unmissables). It was only fitting that the theme song for our What’s Missing podcast was Wildflowers; the song produced through the aforementioned documentary series.
By 2020, the initiative had come full circle, and Australians from all walks of life had come to see that missing persons are individuals who are dearly loved and greatly missed.
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The Missed Foundation acknowledges the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the first inhabitants of the nation and the traditional custodians of the lands where we live, learn and work.
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