ANGELINA PWERLE NGAL - AHARLPER COUNTRY
ANGELINA PWERLE NGAL
AHARLPER COUNTRY, 2008
238 x 121 cm
synthetic polymer paint on linen
REGION
Urapuntja/Amengernterneah (Utopia) NT
PROVENANCE
Lauraine Diggens Fine Art, Melbourne, Vic
Art Leven [formerly Cooee Art], Gadigal (Sydney, NSW)
STORY
Angelina Ngal’s paintings are an intricate mapping of her grandfather’s Country, Alparra, in Utopia, Central Australia. Much of her work centres on the Bush Plum (Carissa lanceolata) Dreaming, a story of seasonal abundance and deep cultural significance. The fruit, small and sweet, ripens in bursts across the desert landscape, providing important sustenance for both people and wildlife.
On canvas, Angelina represents the Bush Plum through dense fields of tiny dots that cascade across the surface, their shifting tones capturing the changing stages of ripening fruit—from pale yellow through to rich purple. This repetition creates a shimmering, almost pulsating effect, evoking the living, breathing presence of Country.
She also paints the wildflowers of Alparra, which emerge after rain and transform the arid plains into patchworks of colour. In these works, her dotting technique becomes more varied, producing subtle gradations and contrasts that suggest the fleeting beauty of blossoms scattered over the desert floor.
While her paintings appear at first glance as striking works of abstraction, each mark is a coded reference to place, story, and ancestral law. The layers of dots are not merely decorative—they trace the cycles of growth, renewal, and continuity that sustain both the land and the community connected to it.
ARTIST PROFILE























