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NYURAPAYIA (MRS BENNETT) NAMPITJINPA - WATERHOLES 1 TO 6

NYURAPAYIA (MRS BENNETT) NAMPITJINPA - WATERHOLES 1 TO 6

SKU: 19944

NYURAPAYIA (MRS BENNETT) NAMPITJINPA

WATERHOLES 1 TO 6,  2010
24.8 x 18 cm each | 49 x 74 cm frames
Limited Edition Etchings on Paper, Set of 6 Prints in 3 frames

 

REGION

Western Desert, NT

 

PROVENANCE
Accompanied by a presentation box with a limited edition photograph of the artist by Ralph Hobbs and a DVD of the prints being made
Private Collection, NSW
Cooee Art Leven, NSW

 

STORY
These prints depict designs associated with the rockhole site of Yumarra, east of Punkilpirri, which is north-west of Docker River in the Walter James Range.

Nyurapayia Nampitjinpa was born in Pitjantjatjara country, near the site of today's Docker River community. She saw no white men until she was in her teens and spent much of her childhood at Pangkupirri, a set of sheltered rockholes deep in the range-folds of the Gibson Desert. By the time she walked in from the bush to the ration depot at Haasts Bluff and encountered mission life she had become a magic healer and was soon recognised as a person of great ritual authority.

She moved to Kintore, the new western settlement of the Pintupi, closer to her traditional lands, and then on to Tjukurla, across the West Australian border in the 1980s.

Nyurapayia, was a close associate of the key painters who shaped the women's painting movement in the early to mid-1990s. She painted only relatively minor mid-grade, formulaic works for Papunya Tula, before Chris Simon, who took her in and rebuilt his Yanda Art business around her.
Living comfortably under Simons’ wing she hit her creative peak painting large, complex canvases depicting her ancestral rockholes in dark, curved lines on black or white, shimmering grounds.

The upshot in the words of journalist Nicholas Rothwell was ‘a suite of paintings that now fill the great private Aboriginal art collections of the world and change hands for hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece. . Her depictions of the sand-dune country and surrounding rocky outcrops bear a relationship to the designs used for body painting during the inma ceremonial dance.

At the time of her death in February 2013, Nyurapayia had reached the pinnacle of desert law, and sacred knowledge and was revered by women throughout the Western desert.

 

 

ARTIST PROFILE

NYURAPAYIA (MRS BENNETT) NAMPITJINPA

    AU$15,000.00Price

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