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GINGER RILEY MUNDUWALAWALA - UNTITLED (WURRU AND MARAWULU)
  • GINGER RILEY MUNDUWALAWALA - UNTITLED (WURRU AND MARAWULU)

    SKU: 21221

    GINGER RILEY MUNDUWALAWALA

    UNTITLED (WURRU AND MARAWULU),  c.1991
    49 x 68 cm; 74.5 x 90.5 cm (framed)
    acrylic on paper

     

    REGION

    Arnhem Land, NT

     

    PROVENANCE
    signed front bottom 'GiNGER. RiLEY'

    Sotheby's Australia, 1991, NSW

    Private collection, NSW

    Art Leven, NSW

     

    STORY
    Wurru, the serpent, was the keeper of the rivers, his sinuous form carving life into the land as he wound his way through the red earth. Above him soared Marawulu, the great eagle, whose piercing cries guided the people and animals to water during the dry season. Together, they were guardians of the country in the Yolŋu cosmology, their roles intertwined in a balance as delicate as the shimmer of heat on the horizon.

     

    One fateful season, a drought gripped the land. The riverbeds cracked, their lifeblood stolen by a sun that showed no mercy. Wurru coiled in the shade of a boab tree, his iridescent scales dulled by thirst.

     

    Marawulu circled above, her wings heavy with the weight of a failing country.Marawulu descended, her shadow a fleeting respite from the blazing sun. “Wurru, keeper of the waters, where is the river you promised to guard?” she asked, her voice both sharp and sorrowful.

     

    Wurru raised his head, his forked tongue tasting the despair in the air. “The waters have fled deep into the earth, beyond even my reach. But I have dreamed of a spring hidden in the sandstone cliffs. If we combine our strengths, we may yet save our country.”

     

    Together, they embarked on a perilous journey. Marawulu scouted from above, her keen eyes scanning the endless ochre landscape for signs of the hidden spring. Below, Wurru slithered tirelessly, his movements etching new trails into the dust.

     

    At last, Marawulu let out a triumphant cry. She had spotted a dark stain on the cliffs—a hidden crevice that promised the lifeblood they sought. But the spring was guarded by ancient spirits who demanded a sacrifice.

     

    Marawulu offered a feather from her radiant wing, a symbol of her freedom and the skies she ruled. Wurru shed a single scale, shimmering with the memory of every river he had ever known. The spirits were appeased, and the spring burst forth, cascading down the cliffs and reviving the parched earth.

     

    Ginger Riley’s painting captures this sacred partnership. The snake winds through the canvas, its form vibrant with the pulse of the land. The bird soars above, its wings outstretched in eternal vigilance. Together, they remind us of the delicate balance between land, water, and spirit—a balance we are all entrusted to uphold.

     

    This story celebrates not only Riley’s iconic style but also the enduring strength of Country and the ancestral forces that shape it.

     

     

     

    ARTIST PROFILE

    GINGER RILEY MUNDUWALAWALA

      AU$11,000.00Price

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