BILL TJAPALTJARRI WHISKEY - ROCKHOLES NEAR THE OLGAS (DIPTYCH)
BILL TJAPALTJARRI WHISKEY
ROCKHOLES NEAR THE OLGAS (DIPTYCH), 2008
30.5 x 30.5 cm (each); 36.5 x 68.5 cm (framed)
acrylic on board
REGION
Mt Leibig, NT
PROVENANCE
Watiyawanu Artists, NT Cat No. 10-080011 & 10-0800015
Private collection, NSW
Art Leven, Gadigal NSWAccompanied by certificates of authenticity from Watiyawanu Artists of Amunturrngu
STORY
Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri did not begin painting on canvas until the final four years of his life, at the age of 84. By then, he was already widely respected as a powerful healer and custodian of sacred knowledge. His paintings—his first to depict the major Dreaming narratives and the creation of important sites throughout his Country—are deeply authoritative and rich with traditional law.
His works centre on ancestral events such as the Cockatoo Dreaming, which took place at his birthplace, Pirupa Akla (a rockhole site near Kata Tjuta and Uluru). In this mythic battle, white feathers were scattered across the land as the combatants tumbled and struck the ground, forming indentations that filled with water from subterranean streams. The sweeping motion of wings created a circular amphitheatre in the land. Today, a luminous central rock marks the fallen cockatoo, still drinking from the sacred pools—its presence an enduring reminder of the Dreaming. As is common in Western Desert painting, sacred geography is inseparable from the mythic and spiritual elements it embodies.
In Whiskey’s works, water sources like Pirupa Akla are represented by concentric circles, their brilliance signifying their spiritual potency rather than their scale. The actions of the ancestral White Cockatoo and Crow are encrypted in dotted formations that echo the topographic features of the landscape and embody the enduring presence of the Dreaming.
ARTIST PROFILE























