Story
Nabulumo is the son of Mick Kubarkku, an artist well known for his paintings of the full and new moons, the sun and the stars. Here he has painted the full and new moon called, in the Eastern Kunwinjku language, dird bukkulurl and lirrk kurrmeng. The site is a large unusually round hole in a sandstone residual on the plain not far from the Mann River. The large hole is said to be the full moon created by the rainbow serpent ‘ngalyod’ who pierced the rock in times of the ‘Dreaming’ and left the shape of the full moon. Dirdbim is not far from the artists’ residence today at Yikarrakkal and the area is rich in rock art and old camping sites. There are also numerous human remains, bones wrapped up in paperback, lying in clefts of sandstone shelters. The Eastern Kunwinjku people of the district have always used Dirdbim as a mortuary site because of the mythological history of the area which is connected to the moon story. This is because the mythology of the moon ancestor relates how an adversary, the spotted quoll, argued with the moon over the fate of humanity. The quoll decided he would die once and once only, however, the moon took his place in the sky to be reborn each lunar month. Because of this Kubarkku often painted this subject with bones or murrngno surrounding the image, just as the actual site at Dirdbim is surrounded by human bones. The techniques of bark painting are usually handed down from one generation to the next, as are the rights of each artist to a particular site or ‘Dreaming’.
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