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  • Lorna Kantilla - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Lorna Kantilla < Back Lorna Kantilla Lorna Kantilla ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE LORNA KANTILLA - BODY PAINT SOLD AU$1,200.00 LORNA KANTILLA - JUKWARRINGA SOLD AU$500.00 LORNA KANTILLA - JILAMARA Sold AU$0.00 LORNA KANTILLA - JUKWARRINGA SOLD AU$1,000.00 LORNA KANTILLA - JUKWARRINGA SOLD AU$500.00 top Anchor 1 PROFILE Lorna Kantilla ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • Hamish Karrkarrhba - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Hamish Karrkarrhba < Back Hamish Karrkarrhba Hamish Karrkarrhba ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE top Anchor 1 PROFILE Hamish Karrkarrhba ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • HER MEDITATIONS - BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - Art Leven

    HER MEDITATIONS - BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA Art Leven - 17 Thurlow St, Redfern, Gadigal, NSW 2016 3 - 24 August 2024 HER MEDITATIONS - BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA Biddy Timms Napanangka 3 - 24 August 2024 HER MEDITATIONS - BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA Biddy Timms Napanangka 3 - 24 August 2024 Art Leven - 17 Thurlow St, Redfern, Gadigal, NSW 2016 Biddy Timms Napanangka Her Meditations 3 - 24 August 2024 Biddy Timms Napanangka has been a working artist for almost 20 years, during which her practice has steadily evolved. You would be hard-pressed to recognise the finely detailed brushwork of an early Timms Napanangka if you were only familiar with her later work. Yet, below the surface, you can find traces of the path leading to the artist she is today.* Warlpiri painting practice as a whole is usually presented as a rhythmic, meditative process involving singing and dancing; swift and fine dot-work spreads over the canvas as the artist traces her sacred Songline across stretches of the Tanami Desert. The art from Lajamanu - as opposed to Yuendumu, the larger of the two Warlpiri townships - is known predominantly for featuring loose, gestural paintings. Many of the artists, however, including Biddy Timms Napanangka, began their careers in the finely-dotted and in some ways more rigid traditions of Warlpiri art-making. Napanangka is a quiet, humble woman. She rarely asks for anything [beyond] a quiet, temperate place to paint and think.** Louisa Erglis, former and interim Manager, Warnayaka Arts At this stage in her career, Napanangka has turned to a more inward form of meditation as she paints. After laying down a thick surface of fresh acrylic paint, she holds her brush so that the tip meets the canvas aiming away from her, bristles agains the grain. Observing her at work invokes the meditative raking of sand in a Japanese Zen garden. Loaded with a new colour, her brush drives across the surface, as though unearthing the new colour from underneath the base layer. Introduction In June of 2023, we conducted a weeklong painting project at Warnayaka Arts In Lajamanu for country x Country, a joint exhibition between ——- Simon Napanangka and Sydney-based painter Neil Tomkins. During this time, we slept on wire-framed trundle beds in the art centre studio, surrounded by thousands of paintings, framed, unframed, rolled, strained, stacked, or suspended from clip-on trouser-hangers on clothing racks. It was in this chaotic and beautiful context that we fell in love with the humble minimalist paintings of Biddy Timms Napanangka. The artist herself is the perfect embodiment of the peaceful, calm works she creates. That week, the studio was abuzz with laughter, conversation, frequent family visitors - constant hustle and bustle. Every day of the workshop Biddy was first one in, approaching the art centre with her walker the exact moment the doors swung open to begin the day. Neil Tomkins, the painter accompanying us on this trip, describes part of his process as “pushing paint around”. The phrase applies just as well to Napanangka’s painting practice. Going through the video footage afterwards, Biddy is remarkably still, hardly moving save for her brush-hand, in a seemingly deep state of meditation. All of the paintings in this exhibition were either discovered or painted during our time in Lajamanu. Artist Profile VIEW CATALOGUE BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) price AU$1,200.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$1,000.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$700.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$500.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$350.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA -NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING - PULUNTARRI Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$1,000.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$700.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) price AU$600.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$500.00 BIDDY BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$350.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - BUSH ONION DREAMING - JANMARDA JUKURRPA Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - MINAMINA JUKURRPA (MINAMINA DREAMING) Sold AU$1,000.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$700.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$600.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) price AU$500.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - MINAMINA JUKURRPU (MINAMINA DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - NAPANGARDI & NAPANANGKA-KURLANGU (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 BIDDY TIMMS NAPANANGKA - PULUNTARRI (BUSH MUSHROOM DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 EX-August1-2024

  • Manuel Pampkal - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Manuel Pampkal < Back Manuel Pampkal Manuel Pampkal ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE top Anchor 1 PROFILE Manuel Pampkal ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY - Art Leven

    SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY Carriageworks, Everleigh, Booth I07 5 - 8 September 2024 SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY Lily Yirdingali Jurrah Hargraves Nungarrayi 5 - 8 September 2024 SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY Lily Yirdingali Jurrah Hargraves Nungarrayi 5 - 8 September 2024 Carriageworks, Everleigh, Booth I07 REQUEST CATALOGUE REQUEST TICKETS VIEW CATALOGUE LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - NGARLKIRDI JUKURRPA price AU$15,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$12,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$12,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI -NGARLKIRDI JUKURRPA price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- NGALYIPI JUKURRPA price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI -NGARLKIRDI JUKURRPA price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$3,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - YAWAKIYI JUKURRPA price AU$3,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - NGALYIPI JUKURRPA price AU$1,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DREAMING) Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S D Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KURLURRNGALINYPA JUKURRPA price AU$15,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAY - WARDILYKA JUKURRPA price AU$12,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - PARRAJA JUKKURPA price AU$12,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DR price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- NGALYIPI JUKURRPA price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DREAMING) price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAY - KANTA JUKURRPA price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$3,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- NGALYIPI JUKURRPA (SNAKE DREAMING) price AU$1,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KURLURRNGALINYPA JUKURRPA Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- NGALYIPI JUKURRPA Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S D Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$15,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S DR price AU$12,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$8,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI -NGARLKIRDI JUKURRPA price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPWARDILYKA JUKURRPA price AU$5,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - WARDIYKA JUKURRPA price AU$3,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI- NGALYIPI JUKURRPA price AU$3,500.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - YAWAKIYI JUKURRPA price AU$1,000.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - NGALYIPI JUKURRPA Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KURLURRNGALINYPA JUKURRPA Sold AU$0.00 LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KARNTA JUKURRPA (WOMEN’S D Sold AU$0.00 EX 272

  • Djirrirra Wunungmurra - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Djirrirra Wunungmurra < Back Djirrirra Wunungmurra Djirrirra Wunungmurra ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA (HOLLOW LOG) SOLD AU$9,000.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - BUYKU Sold AU$3,200.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA (HOLLOW LOG) Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA (HOLLOW LOG) Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA SOLD AU$3,500.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA (BUSH YAM) Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA - YUKUWA Sold AU$0.00 top Anchor 1 PROFILE Djirrirra Wunungmurra ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • Otto Pareroultja - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Otto Pareroultja Also know as: Parachultja, Parawiltja < Back Otto Pareroultja Also know as: Parachultja, Parawiltja Otto Pareroultja 1914 - 1993 Also know as: Parachultja, Parawiltja ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE OTTO PAREROULTJA - MONOLITHS OF PALM PADDOCK Sold AU$0.00 top Anchor 1 PROFILE Otto Pareroultja 1914 - 1993 Otto Pareroultja was the oldest of three brothers that Rex Battarbee referred to as the ‘breakaway group’. They were amongst the new generation to follow Albert Namatjira as the watercolour landscape artists at the Lutheran mission of Hermannsburg. Pareroultja was twelve years younger than Namatjira, and despite Battarbee’s initial preference for works by Otto’s younger brother Edwin, it is the elder brother’s work that has been consistently compared with that of Namatjira. Even in 1947, when he first began painting, there were those who inferred that Otto’s works resonated with that of European modernists such as Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gaugin in that his landscapes were distinguished by brilliant colour, dense patterning and ‘rhythmic pulsation’. While Albert Namatjira’s life has often been characterised by art historians as being ‘lived in two worlds’ - torn between the need for acceptance by his own Aranda people with the pressure of kinship obligations; and compelled by the imperative to act as if he were a white European citizen, Pareroultja’s life was not so marked by conflict. His art, however, does dwell in that space between Indigenous Australian, and European styles. Though Pareroultja never departed from the use of watercolour over the course of his artistic career, his style and subject matter became markedly ‘more Aboriginal’, and, with this gradual transition, much stronger. The sense of movement inherent in his paintings is reminiscent of Dreaming narratives. Anthropologist T.G.H. Stehlow and Battarbee both pointed out the connections between the swirling parallel lines and concentric circles of Otto’s paintings and the designs found on the sacred ‘tjuringa’ stones associated with men’s ceremonial life. It is this ‘traditional resonance’ in his painting that distinguishes Pareroultja from other artists of the Hermannsburg school. Landscape painting as taught at the Lutheran mission, and practiced by the majority of community painters, was rather a matter of ‘freeze-frame’; the landscape rendered static against the page. By comparison Pareroultja’s desert landscapes exhibit a distinct dynamic originality. The best of his works were painted late in a career which spanned twenty years. His paintings predominantly depict sacred sites - although at the time of Pareroultja’s painting they may not have been recognised as such outside of their community context. Dark areas are set against regions of prolific colour. The effect is that of concentrated working in defined regions of the canvas such as the ridges of a mountain, or the trunk of a tree. Pareroultja was not overly concerned with correct perspective in his landscape. Shade and scale resulted in paintings that can appear all detail and no depth, almost as if they were intended as the backdrop to a play. His forte was not artistic realism. While we have no indication that he aimed for this, the merit of a painting by Otto Pareroultja lies in the visual articulation of certain Indigenous elements, rendered through European technique. While Otto painted from 1947 onwards his work was largely overshadowed by that of Albert Namatjira until the early 1980’s when several of his works were included in important exhibitions. This led to his inclusion in the Great Australian Art Exhibition 1788-1988 at the Art Gallery of South Australia and marked the point at which a reassessment of his artistic legacy began. Over the years there has been some debate as to whether Pareroultja’s depiction of sacred ancestral knowledge was deliberate or unconscious. A more pertinent question might be whether the artist aimed to be political. The answer is probably no. Rex Battarbee, encouraged Pareroultja, like Namatjira and others, to paint things ‘as he saw them’, advice that seems to have been, in Pareroultja’s case, the catalyst for a break with tradition. The native Indigenous forms in the landscape seem simply an intrinsic part of the artist’s vision of his environment. As is often the case, painting truthfully generally makes for good art. ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS The comparison between the paintings of Albert Namatjira and Otto Pareroultja in recent art criticism has raised Pareroultja’s profile as a key figure in ‘transitional’ Aboriginal art (that is art presenting both Indigenous Australian and European influences). The surge of interest since the late 1980s is imbued with certain politics. Both Pareroultja and Namatjira have been the subject of a ‘re-Aboriginalisation’. In 1986 Daniel Thomas, director of the Art Gallery of South Australia, initiated a project to posit Namatjira as an intermediary on the road to the emergence of the Papunya movement rather than the producer of anomalous kitsch, as he had been treated during the previous decade. Interest in this new perception of Namatjira also reflected on Pareroultja, who, in comparison would, more overtly, incorporate Aboriginal elements in his watercolours. The study rekindled an appreciation of the artistic merit in Namatjira’s work and this was reflected in rising market values for his, and concurrently, although not as dramatically, the works of Pareroultja. The average sale price of Otto's work has steadily increased at auction since the mid 1970s and his success rate at auction is now a very respectable 74%. This should considered high for an artist that has had over 517 works offered for sale over a very long period. Prices in the early eighties were generally under $100 but increased gradually to around $300 by the late 80s, and $750 in the late nineties. By 2002 the artist’s career average price was $1,500 and reached $2,800 in 2005 even when omitting the spectacular result achieved for a work in July 2003, which would have skewed the average significantly. In that year Sotheby’s sold Central Australian Landscape c. 1956 for $24,000, against an estimate of $7,000-10,000 at its July Sydney auction. Prior to this no work by Pareroultja had commanded more than $10,000 in the secondary market. However three years later, Central Australian Landscape 1950’s attracted $84,000, well above market estimates of $30,000-50,000 at Sotheby’s July sale in Melbourne (Lot 29). ‘A very similar looking painting’, was the wry remark in The Australian Art Market Report (2006/7:19). The two works are indeed similar. Like so many paintings in Pareroultja’s oeuvre, both of these works depict the white ghost gum. In fact, in the entire body of Pareroultja’s work, very few paintings vary from this theme; a uniformity that might appear obsessive, even farcical, to a non-Indigenous eye, until we realise that what is being painted are not actually trees, but rather spirits; or, should I say, the representational motif of a spirit. It is only in this light that the repetition begins to make more sense. Tim Strehlow observed that the ‘tiger like rings’ looping the trunks of the ghost gums were referential to the practice of painting black and white rings on the trunks of totem poles, an Aranda ritual. Although his top two prices have been for works painted in the 1950s, across his entire oeuvre there is little difference in price according to when the painting was created. Many works are undated and his style varied according to whim, as brightly coloured expressionistic works were painted in the same years as more subdued realistic versions. In general, the market has favoured the former with the subtler pale and the less complex imagery fetching lower prices. In 2007 no less than four of his top ten records were displaced by new results. These included the $48,000 paid for a 1960s Aranda landscape sold by Sotheby’s in July (Lot 68), which carried a presale estimate of $40,000-60,000. An estimate of this magnitude would have been unthinkable just two years earlier, such has been the growth of interest in the artist’s work. Another Central Australian Landscape sold at Joel Fine Art in June for $18,750 (Lot 61) and a lovely rendition of Haast’s Bluff snuck into the artist’s top results at number 11 when sold for $6000 against an estimate of just $1,500-1,800. The overall result of this highly successful year for the artist was that his average price rose from $1,836 to $2,187 per work, surely remarkable for an artist who has had so many works presented over more than three decades. In 2008 however his works were far less successful. Only nine of 17 works offered found a new home and his highest price was a poor $5,400. This lowered his career clearance rate from 81% to 79%. The upward trajectory seen previous to 2008 was regained in 2009 with all but one of the 16 works on offer finding a buyer, whilst setting new third, fifth, ninth and tenth records. The third and fifth record sales eclipsed expectations by a significant amount as exemplified by an image simply entitled Ghost Gums , which fetched $32,400 against a presale estimate of just $15,000-20,000. This gain was consolidated in 2010, amidst intense interest in the Hermannsburg water-colourists. Otto was the 12th most successful artist in 2011, hot on the heals of Albert Namatjira. This saw him become the 28th most successful artist of the movement, a status he continued to hold at the end of 2019. The one notable sale of 2017 was an uncharacteristic watercolour on wood panel, which more than tripled its high presale estimate of 3,000, ultimately selling for $9,660. But sales have flatlined since that time. 2019, for instance, was a disapointingyear. While 21 works sold of 26 offered the highest price achieved was just $3,480 incl BP at Eder Fine Art in Adelaide and his average price was just $1,122. Otto Pareroultja’s works have a strong appeal and his finest works should continue their steady growth in value over the next decade. We are, however, unlikely to see any but the very best achieve the dizzying heights of his two highest results. While his works are expected to steadily grow in value, recent sales are of concern. With records for sales going back to the mid 1970s it is remarkable that his success at auction has been as high as it is. Still, Otto Pareroultja was a most important Australian landscape painter who imbued his works with inherent spiritual presence. Amongst the artist's of the Hermannsburg school, his oeuvre is likely to remain second only to that of Albert Namatjira for a very long time into the future. Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • Margaret Napangardi Brown - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Margaret Napangardi Brown < Back Margaret Napangardi Brown Margaret Napangardi Brown ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE top Anchor 1 PROFILE Margaret Napangardi Brown SELECTED EXHIBITIONS: 2016 Solo Exhibition, A Utopian Vision, Cooee Art Gallery, NSW 20th Oct - 19th Nov 2016 2016 Finalist, Alice Prize, Alice Springs Art Foundation, Alice Springs, N.T. 2014 Narrativa Herióca - Pintura Aborígine do Deserto Australiano Renaissance Hotel, São Paulo, Brazil & Arca Urbana, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2014 Finalist, 38th Alice Prize, Araluen Arts Centre, Alice Springs 2013 Finalist, Fleurieu Art Prize, 2013, Maclaren Vale, South Australia 2013 Finalist, The Waterhouse Natural Science Art Prize, Museum of South Australia 2012-13 Blake Prize Director’s Cut on-line exhibition, The Blake Society 2012 finalist Paddington Art Prize, Sydney 2012 finalist, Hawkesbury Art Prize, Purple Noon Gallery, Freemans Reach (Blue Mountains region) NSW 2012 Tattersalls Club Art Prize Award, Tattersalls Club, Brisbane 2012 finalist, Metro Art Award, Metro Art Gallery, Melbourne 2012 The Churchie, National Emerging Art Exhibition, Griffith University Art Gallery, Queensland College of Art (Judge’s Award winner) 2011 Tattersall’s Club Art Prize Award, Tattersall’s Club, Brisbane, 2010 (Commended) 2011 Kinross House, Uniting Arts Toorak, Vic; 25 May - 3 July 2011, Grafton Regional Gallery, NSW' 30 July - 8 September 2011, The Schoolhouse Gallery, Tasmania 2010 Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, Campbelltown Art Centre, 2010, Sydney 2010 59th Blake Prize, National Art School Gallery, Sydney, 3 September - 2 October 2010 23 Oct - 28 Nov 2010, Adelaide Festival Centre, SA; 28 Jan - 3 March 2011, Delmar Trinity Gallery, NSW; 18 March - 21 April 2010 Metro Gallery Art Award, Metro Gallery, Melbourne 2009 Blake Prize, The Blake Society, National Art School Gallery, Sydney City of Albany Art Prize, 4 – 27 April 2009, Vancouver Arts Centre, Albany, W.A. Awarded Highly Commended Making their Mark: Elizabeth Kunoth Kngwarray and Genevieve Kemarr Loy, 20 March - 25 April 2009, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne An Individual Perspective: From the Indigenous Collection of Lauraine Diggins, Deakin University Gallery, Burwood, and touring to Geelong Gallery, 2010 2008 Impulse to Paint: The Artists of Iylenty, Utopia, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne Moscow World Fine Art Fair, Manege, Moscow, Russia The Churchie National Emerging Art, Morris Hall at Churchie (Anglican Church Grammar School), East Brisbane Annual Collectors’ Exhibition, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne Australian Antiques & Art Dealers Fair 2008, Sydney Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, Campbelltown Arts Centre, Sydney 2007 Visions of Utopia, Cooee Aboriginal Art, Sydney Memory As Landscape, Masterpiece @ IXL, Hobart Utopia Today, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne COLLECTIONS: Anglican Church Grammar School, Brisbane Lauraine Diggins, Melbourne LITERATURE: Impulse to Paint: The Artists of Iylenty, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Melbourne, 2008 (exhibition catalogue) Annual Collectors’ Exhibition, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 2008 (exhibition catalogue). ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • Sydney Contemporary 2023 | Art Leven

    Sydney Contemporary 2023 Brochure | Cooee Art Leven SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY 2023 CATALOGUE VIEW MORE SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY DETAILS VIEW MORE SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY DETAILS

  • Robert Ambrose Cole - Art Leven

    ColeRober Robert Ambrose Cole Robert Ambrose Cole 1959 - 1994 Robert Ambrose Cole is best known for having created of a distinct personal niche between traditional and contemporary Indigenous art styles through his experimentation with ‘dotting’ techniques. While growing up in urban Mparntwe (Alice Springs), he encountered a variety of influences. The tradition-based art movements emerging from the Central and Western Deserts inspired him, as did the European-influenced landscapes of the Hermannsburg watercolourists. Due in part to his own ancestral heritage, both provided fertile areas of artistic exploration, but it was in their eventual synthesis that Cole’s art reached its ultimate aesthetic realization. Cole himself was an unassuming man who approached his art with great caring and sincerity and was reluctant to explain his imagery. Yet despite the decidedly spiritual or contemplative feel across his entire oeuvre, art patrons, curators and critics often made profound statements when commenting on his works. Though his style varied, many of his more recongisable works were inhabited by a particular kind of meticulous and evenly laid white dotting. This is the one constant in a body of work spanning the six years prior to 1994, the year of the artist’s death. He began painting in 1988, at the age of twenty-nine and worked at the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association. CAAMA brought him into contact with artists from the Utopia region, a people with whom he shared an ancestral heritage through paternal ties. Cole’s personal interpretation of the Utopia method led him to fuse this style with a European figurative influence. Although his work remained predominantly conceptual, the tension between the figurative and the abstract was a continuing theme throughout his work. The technique of wash and overlay, prompted Cole to experiment with delicate and sensitive blends of colour and tonal relationships, often generating a glowing otherworldly patina across the surface. In other works however, he built a stronger surface texture. Areas of dots emphasized the substantiality of simple forms within an expansive and highly charged field. The ambiguity between distinct structure and dissolving boundaries found its fullest expression in the works painted just prior to his untimely death through illness at the age of thirty five. Coles earliest works took up the imagery of sites and symbols attached to the country and people of his parents; the Warramunga people of Banka Banka, north of Tennant Creek on his mother’s side and Aputula, Finke, the sandstone hills on the edge of the Simpson Desert, on his fathers side. Yet Cole was removed from conventional narratives of Aboriginal art, partly by his conscious abstraction and also by his reluctance to explain his imagery. Perhaps he wanted to avoid being fetishized as a painter of spiritualised forms. For instance, the sense of an aerial view, a perspective that occurred throughout his work, was not explained as a land narrative. And, though it was grounded in traditional Aboriginal culture, Cole appears to have been most concerned with his own personal painterly exploration of colour and form. His dots were always carefully measured, spaced, and applied with attention to varying sizes and areas. While the creation of a surface vibration by varying dot size and spacing is part of a continuing aspect of Aboriginal painting, Cole strove for a precision that differentiated his work from other artists working in the same vein. Figures and shapes below the surface were contained and defined by the overlaid dots to give the effect of a shimmering, mirage –like illusion (not dissimilar to that of op art). The ebb and flow of indistinct shapes were accompanied by the constant assertion of their presence. Cole’s work was best defined within this schema. In Two Spirits 1991, we can make out the form of two figures, defined by two distinct fields of dots. A third layer of paint is drizzled (Pollock-like), across the canvas, adding an element of chaos to the meticulously laid background. In describing his work, Margo Neale wrote ‘…the spiritual fervour or contemplative state that accompanies the act of creating is an act of homage which also makes them religious icons' (1994: 95). Robert Ambrose Cole painted for only a brief period and was principally promoted through Christopher Hodges’ Utopia Art Gallery in Sydney and galleries that he worked with including Mary Reid Brunstrom’s Austral Gallery in St. Louis, U.S.A. Cole only lived long enough to have two exhibitions yet within the brief span of his career his work was included in a number of important art awards; was issued on a stamp by Australia Post, and most importantly, included in Australian Perspecta at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1993. His paintings were generally small and created on either paper or canvas as was the case with his highest priced work, which measured just 69.6 x 50 cm and sold for $11,162 when estimated at $6,000-8,000 by Christie's in August 2000 (Lot 8). This was one of five works by Cole sold through Christie's which have generated $31,134 since his work first appeared in salerooms in 2000. Only two other auction houses have presented his paintings. Sotheby’s have sold just one for $575 the year his work first appeared at auction in 1999. Since that time Christies and Lawson~Menzies have championed Cole’s work. The latter have sold seven pieces for a total of $29,040 including six of his ten highest results on the secondary market to date. Another work sold by Christies in 2000 had been included in the landmark exhibition Spirit and Place: Art in Australia 1861-1996, held at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney in 1996-1997. Measuring just 79 x 59.5 cm and painted in 1992, this untitled work sold for $7,475 against a presale estimate of $4,000-6,000. It was no finer in quality two excellent works on paper that both failed to sell in 2008 at Leonard Joel, despite extremely reasonable estimates. A missed opportunity had a discriminating collector picked them up and re-offered them through an auction house more familiar with the artist’s work. Despite the failures above, that resulted in his success rate dropping from 81% to 72% Cole’s clearance is still impressive. Most of those works that have failed to sell have been screenprints carrying overly high estimates. While his best year at auction was 2000 when both his highest and fourth priced paintings sold at Christies, his most prolific years in the salesrooms have been 2005-2006 during which five of six paintings offered sold for a total of $30,200. His works are highly desirable and eminently affordable at an average price of just $4,673. Collectors would be wise to keep an eye out for any that come up for sale. With estimates running in the $8,000-10,000 range these works certainly seem to represent very good value given their rarity. Explore our artworks See some of our featured artworks below ANGELINA PWERLE NGAL - UNTITLED ( BUSH RAISIN MAN) Price AU$3,000.00 ALISON (JOJO) PURUNTATAMERI - WINGA (TIDAL MOVEMENT/WAVES) Out of stock LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KURLURRNGALINYPA JUKURRPA Price From AU$13,500.00 BRONWYN BANCROFT - UNTITLED Out of stock JOSHUA BONSON - SKIN: A CELEBRATION OF CULTURE Price AU$8,500.00 BOOK - KONSTANTINA - GADIGAL NGURA Price From AU$99.00 FREDDIE TIMMS - MOONLIGHT VALLEY Price AU$35,000.00 NEIL ERNEST TOMKINS - BURN THERE, DON'T BURN THERE Price AU$7,000.00 SHOP NOW

  • Richard Bell - Artist Profile - Cooee Art Leven

    Artist Profile for Richard Bell < Back Richard Bell Richard Bell ARTIST PROFILE ARTIST CV MARKET ANALYSIS READ FULL ARTIST PROFILE RICHARD BELL - A WHITE HERO FOR BLACK AUSTRALIA Sold AU$0.00 top Anchor 1 PROFILE Richard Bell ARTIST CV Market Analysis MARKET ANALYSIS Disclaimer: At Cooee Art Leven, we strive to maintain accurate and respectful artist profiles. Despite our efforts, there may be occasional inaccuracies. We welcome any corrections or suggested amendments. Please contact us with your feedback .

  • George Mung Mung - Art Leven

    MungGeorg George Mung Mung George Mung Mung 1921 - 1991 Lilmayading, Lirrmayirriny George Mung Mung spent his life in the East Kimberley cattle industry until he finally settled, in his fifties, where he was originally born and spent his earliest years. His father, Charlie Mungmung, had worked as a police tracker stationed at Turkey Creek at the time of his birth and George began work in the stock camps while still a boy. He was employed by the manager of the Tickelera Cattle Station, Authur Muggleton, and became a drover. As a youth he travelled across the country as far as Queensland with up to 1,200 head of cattle. Later, when the new owner of Tickelara, Bill Scurthrope, sold up and moved to Spring Creek, George, now married to Betty Carrington, joined him and had a family. More than a decade later they returned to the East Kimberley to work with Jimmy Kline, the manager of Texas Downs Station where George became head stockman, and when Kline moved to Turkey Creek, George followed. He later spent four years breaking horses for Tom Davis at Lissadell Station before relocating his family to Wyndham, where his children could attend school. However, with the establishment of the Warmun Community in the mid seventies George once again returned to live at Warmun with his family. The Pastoral Award of 1969, which gave equal pay to Indigenous workers, had all but ended the lifestyle of the Aboriginal stockmen. They found themselves thrown off stations, homeless and unemployed. In its wake, Warmun provided both a shelter and, coincidentally, a site for cultural and artistic revival. This was given extra impetus when George and a number of his contemporaries, including Rover Thomas and Paddy Jaminji, were convinced that the devastation Cyclone Tracy wreaked on Darwin in 1974, was the manifestation of the Rainbow Serpent’s anger at the abandonment of traditional culture in the face of white influence. In a dream Rover Thomas was visited by the spirit of a female relative who had recently died in a car crash, and over the following year this dream became the basis of a song cycle during which the singers revisited all of the most important East Kimberley Dreaming sites. By 1978 this had developed into the Krill Krill Ceremony during which the woman’s spirit travels from the moment of her death in a medical airplane hovering over a whirlpool, to her conception site near Turkey Creek and on throughout the Kimberley to eventually end near Cape Levique as she overlooks the destruction of Darwin. From the outset, George Mung Mung aided the central figures of this invention, Rover Thomas and Paddy Jaminji, in creating the ceremonial boards for the dancers to carry in this reenactment. His own artistic development was significantly influenced by these early origins in both manner and concept. Unlike the large ephemeral ground paintings of the Western Desert with their omnipotent viewpoint, these paintings on plywood boards invited a range of different perspectives. George’s art comprised works that incorporated both aerial and lateral depictions of country simultaneously, as well as figurative profiles of ancestral animals and occasional descriptive annotation. In George Mung Mung’s works, and specifically his earliest paintings on board, naturalistic figurative representations are far more prolific than in Western Desert works, no doubt derived from the Warmun painters tendency to depict the features of the environment created by the ancestors, rather than mapping the journey of ancestral travels, as in desert painting. Initially George’s paintings differed greatly from those of his contemporaries. While Rover’s sparse canvases demonstrated a ‘simplicity that suggested there was far more to each work than met the eye' (McDonald 2004: 21), George Mung Mung’s works were characterized by more complex composition combined with greater figuration. Later he tended toward works that were far bolder and geometric, executed in a far darker palette. In these works he always portrayed the country, which in his final years he would go and visit with his wife, children and grandchildren. A favorite camping spot was Cattle Creek, where they would sit under the tree that stood just ten meters from where Betty was born and where they had married. With his family around them they would relate stories around the camp fire that would connect them all to their country. George suddenly died in 1991, just as Rover’s work was being presented at the Venice Biennale and Kimberley paintings were beginning to make a major impact on the Aboriginal art market. George Mung Mung was amongst the initial instigators of the art movement at Warmun in the East Kimberley and as a result his works have been included in major art collections around Australia including the Holmes a Court Collection and the Berndt Museum of Anthropology. His inclusion in the latter gives insight into the anthropological value of many of his works and also explains the stellar result of $29,900 that was achieved for one of his finest works as early as 1999. The painting, Texas Country 1985, sold for almost three times its estimated $8,000-12,000. It was a remarkable work combining diverse elements such as a beautifully rendered crocodile and bird, and perspectives of distant hills, with spectacular coherency. The record price was undoubtedly deserved, both for its historical significance and its aesthetic beauty. However it was a precedent that seemed difficult to match, and the record stood until 2007, a year in which three paintings entered the artist’s top ten results. His new record-breaking work had all of the qualities of the former record holder and sold for $34,000, a tad below the high estimate placed on it in Sotheby’s July sale (Lot 120). Along with this result, Frog Hollow near Turkey Creek, an undated painting with Waringarri Aboriginal Art provenance, sold for $24,000 at Sotheby’s in November (Lot 44). It was a typically animated rendition of the landscape in which Mung Mung depicted elements in both lateral and aerial perspective. The arabesques of flowing water at the top of the painting graphically imitated the undulating hills and limestone ridges in the lower section. It incorporated an image of the Rainbow Serpent, indicating the presence of the ancestral forces that vivify the land. The final work of the three 2007 entries was a nice 1989 board featuring a statuesque image of a Kangaroo which appeared as if it were the embodiment of a particular site amongst the surrounding hills. It sold for $18,000 at Lawson~Menzies in November (Lot 117). While the best of his figurative works have done well, a large number of George’s works are executed in a very dark palette and lack the allure of works by several of his contemporaries. There has been difficulty in selling both his large, highly estimated works such as Berlanyji Country 1990, which passed in at auction both in 1999 and 2005 when offered at Philips ($20,000-25,000) and Lawson~Menzies ($25,000-35,000) respectively. Those that have failed to sell were created between 1986 and 1990 and have carried a wide variety of estimates. While two carvings of Creator Snakes both failed to sell, a lovely small carved fish created in 1988 achieved $3,120 when offered at Lawson~Menzies with an estimate of $1,500-2,000 in November 2006 (Lot 233). The best works by George Mung Mung rarely appear for sale. The majority of these were created prior to the introduction of synthetic glue binders making the quality of the surface of many works extremely delicate and alluring. The organic surfaces, figurative detail and delicacy of execution make these paintings highly desirable, and within his oeuvre there exist remarkable treasures of rare brilliance. George passed away just as Warmun began to gain wide recognition and it is amazing to recall that many of his paintings were created at a time when there really was no market for East Kimberly art at all. Mary Macha who played an influential role in promoting the work of these artists has often been quoted as remarking how very hard it was, having been told by the Aboriginal Arts and Crafts company ‘don’t buy any more of that stuff, there’s no market‘ (Laurie 2000: 14). Although this is now far from the case, George did not see the full glory that Warmun would achieve, nor have the chance to realize his own individual potential as an artist as he might have done. He was a great teacher, who was absolutely devoted to the Warmun school in his desire to pass on cultural knowledge to future generations of Gidja children, and would have been astounded and delighted to know how productively the seeds the he and his contemporaries sowed have grown to bear fruit. He is an artist whose works are included in many important public and private collections, and should never be overlooked by those fortunate enough to be present when a work becomes available for purchase. Explore our artworks See some of our featured artworks below ANGELINA PWERLE NGAL - UNTITLED ( BUSH RAISIN MAN) Price AU$3,000.00 ALISON (JOJO) PURUNTATAMERI - WINGA (TIDAL MOVEMENT/WAVES) Out of stock LILY YIRDINGALI JURRAH HARGRAVES NUNGARRAYI - KURLURRNGALINYPA JUKURRPA Price From AU$13,500.00 BRONWYN BANCROFT - UNTITLED Out of stock JOSHUA BONSON - SKIN: A CELEBRATION OF CULTURE Price AU$8,500.00 BOOK - KONSTANTINA - GADIGAL NGURA Price From AU$99.00 FREDDIE TIMMS - MOONLIGHT VALLEY Price AU$35,000.00 NEIL ERNEST TOMKINS - BURN THERE, DON'T BURN THERE Price AU$7,000.00 SHOP NOW

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