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52 results found for "Martumili Artists"

  • MUŊURRU found metal sign etchings - by Bandarr Wirrpanda

    the group exhibition 'Game, Set, Match', consisting of seven individual series of artworks by various artists This series of artworks showcases a significant shift in the artistic practices of men in the North-Eastern Story provided by Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre on behalf of the artist, Bandarr Wirrpanda: An understanding

  • Angelina Guluwulla Karadada Boona

    This series of works from Waringarri Aboriginal Arts/Kira Kiro Artists is part of the current group exhibition 'Game, Set, Match', consisting of seven individual series of artworks by various artists - on view now Her mum is famous artist Lily Karadada and her father is Jack Karadada, who was a medicine man and would

  • Perspex Perspective

    current group exhibition Game, Set, Match, consisting of seven individual series of artworks by various artists When artist Sonia Kurarra discovered them, she decided to paint a large work on one of the sheets and According to the artist, ‘This is a story about Dreamtime people before Canning. is made by layering acrylic colours on to the Perspex with the bold mark-making for which Mangkaja artists

  • Judy Watson Napangardi

    (c.1925 - 2016) Born on Mt. Doreen Station, north-west of Alice Springs circa 1925, Judy Watson Napangardi grew up in the vast Warlpiri country that lies between the Tanami and Gibson deserts. Her traditional nomadic life came to an end, however, when the Warlpiri were forced to live in the new government settlement at Yuendumu. Years later, following the birth of her ten children amid great struggles living under European colonisation, the influence of those early years in the land of her ancestors burst forth in her art. Her principal focus was the women’s Dreaming of the Karnta-kurlangu – a large number of ancestral women who danced across the land, creating important sites, discovering plants, foods, and medicines, as well as establishing the ceremonies that would perpetuate their generative powers. At Mina Mina, these ancestral women danced and performed ceremonies before traveling on to Janyinki and other sites as they moved east toward Alcoota. During their ritual dancing, digging sticks rose up out of the ground and the women carried these implements with them on their long journey east, singing and dancing all the way without rest. The hairstring is anointed with red ochre and is a secret and sacred connection between the women’s ceremony and the country, which enables them to connect with the spirit of the Dreaming. The Rod Menzies Estate | Indigenous Art Collection | Auction Part II Cooee Art Leven 17 Thurlow Street Redfern Tuesday 5th March 2024 Below are some of Judy Watson Napangardi's artworks that appear in the Rod Menzies Estate Auction Part II

  • Joanne Currie Nalingu & Joshua Bonson

    on Canvas AU$11,000 The importance of the river as a metaphor for life and change is constant in the artist's He won the Top End NAIDOC Artist of the Year in 2013, and followed it up by winning the Young Achievers Award NT main prize, as well as Artist of the year in 2014.

  • Exhibition Opening - Black and White | Konstantina

    Association of Australia (AAAA), which represents the interests and amplifies the voices of all Aboriginal artists

  • FEATURE ARTIST – FIRST NATIONS FINE ART AUCTION NOVEMBER 2024

    Preceding the start of her professional painting career in the late 1980’s, she worked as a batik artist new spelling, described as aligning with “the most up-to-date conventions” will also feature in the artist Kngwarreye moved through a series of artistic periods in her short yet prolific eight-year career. a seminal time in social history, works of this calibre are becoming increasingly important to her artistic

  • Amy Loogatha | Exhibition Opening

    gives context to the work, along with common themes explored throughout the career and oeuvre of the artist

  • Carol Puruntatameri: Tiwi Bark Painter and Custodian of Story

    Carol Puruntatameri (1959 - ) For Aboriginal artist Carol Puruntatameri, painting is not only a form A Family of First Nations Artists Carol Puruntatameri is part of an extended family of First Nations artists who have been central to the revitalisation of Tiwi cultural expression. Among them is her uncle Paddy Freddy Puruntatameri, a senior lawman and respected artist who passed down As the artist explains: “I’m painting the old ways for the new generation.”

  • FIRST NATIONS FINE ART AUCTION III | 2025

    Important Works by First Nations Artists Welcome to our biannual First Nations Fine Art Auction, to be One highlight of this auction is a collection of seven hand-painted ukuleles (LOT 15) by artists including An Exhibition of Hand-Painted Ukuleles , they are accompanied by a collection of photographs of the artists LOTS 21–33 and 57–68 represent the diversity of Australia’s Top End artists with examples from every Including the Arnhem Land master John Mawurndjul (LOT 25) , celebrated contemporary Yolŋu artist Dhambit

  • ANGELINA PWERLE NGAL | FIRST NATIONS FINE ART AUCTION | JUNE 2025

    Angelina was married to Louie Pwerle, who was an artist in his own right, the elder brother of Cowboy artist from Ernabella and Suzie Bryce, a craft instructor. from Aboriginal Australia  (USA and Canada, 2016-2019), Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 According to the artist herself, “This is a constant engagement. “Angelina Pwerle: An artist from Utopia”. Art Monthly Australasia (292): p. 34–39.

  • 2024 | Year in Review

    The rebrand reflects our vision to foster deeper connections with artists and audiences while continuing This exhibition solidifies Kngwarreye's standing as one of the most influential artists globally, further The auction saw a high percentage of works sold, with notable pieces by artists such as Lin Onus and Darwin based artist Joshua Bonson's A ncestors Footsteps, themed around a quasi-pilgrimage to the artist ’s ancestral Torres Strait Islands, and It Flows  by award-winning artist Joanne Currie Nalingu. 

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