Art, words and photos from Central Australian Aboriginal Art Centres
Quarterly edition, Autumn 2023
Art, words and photos from Central Australian Aboriginal Art Centres
Quarterly edition, Autumn 2023
Ernabella Arts artist Lynette Lewis has received a special invitation to be an international exhibitor in the upcoming Entomophagous Dining (Eating Insects) exhibition in Ann Arbor, USA. Lynette’s 16 piece plate and cup setting
Puti Pikiniki – Bush Picnic is her interpretation of going out on Country and having a meal. Lynette has used the walka (design) for which she has become renowned – Tjala or honey ants.
We are excited to be exhibiting at Ngununggula, Southern Highlands Regional Gallery where we’ll have the privilege of showcasing our new works on beautiful Gundungurra Country. An expression and reflection of country, the works depict Tjoritja (pronounced Choor-it-ja) – West MacDonnell Ranges country that stretches for 161 kilometres west of Mparntwe (Alice Springs).
20 current Iltja Ntjarra artists worked hard to present a unique and innovative body of work including, works on paper, watercolour on repurposed road signs, silk, and wooden artefacts. Established and mid-career artists Vanessa Inkamala, Hubert Pareroultja, Mervyn Rubuntja, Selma Coulthard, Ivy Pareroultja, Betty Namatjira Wheeler, Marcus Wheeler, Stanley Ebatarinja, Kathy Inkamala, Reinhold Inkamala and Benita Clements worked alongside, and supported, new and emerging artists Mandy Malbunka, Dellina Inkamala, Dianne Inkamala, Delray Inkamala, Bronwyn Lankin, Tina Malbunka, Kathleen France, Ada Lechleitner and Russell Inkamala.
All artists working here at the Iltja Ntjarra Art Centre are continuing to paint in the Hermannsburg School tradition established by their grandfather and relative, Albert Namatjira. Everyone here is family. Artists are connected through their Dreamings, their ancestors’ bloodline and by learning to paint in the Hermannsburg School style passed down through the generations, taught by the senior elders painting in the early years of the watercolour movement. By carrying on this legacy our artists are sustaining an important piece of living history. The works made for this exhibition are an expression of these multilayered connections.
Ikuntji Artists presents our latest publication Ikuntji Textiles; exploring the development of fabric designs, stories and the artists behind them.
This full-colour publication provides an insight into our range of wearable textiles while elevating the art form and considering its place in the world of fine art.
Texts include a range of interviews with our artists in Luritja and English, expert voices in the field of textile design, collaborators and our staff who have been on this journey with us.
This book is the result of years of artistic workshops, exhibitions, photo shoots and recordings of stories with the artists and collaborations nationally and internationally. It is self-published by Ikuntji Artists and supported by donors and Indigenous Languages and Arts funding as well as Arts NT.
In August 2022, a group of women artists from Kaltukatjara travelled out to Eagle Valley for a 3-day bush painting trip. This trip was also a good opportunity to do some grass burning, go hunting, tell stories, and sing and dance together. The artists – a mix of senior grandmothers, established artists and young women – created two large-scale collaborative works depicting the Kungka Kutjara (Two Sisters) story, whose songline runs through the country close to Kaltukatjara. This story records the sisters’ travels across the vast desert country in ancestral times.
These collaborative works form the core of the Kaltukatjara Ladies exhibition opening 2nd March 2023 at Yaama Ganu gallery in Moree, NSW. The exhibition also presents individual works from the Kaltukatjara women artists. It is a testament to the diversity and creativity of these contemporary women artists working to preserve and honour the culture and stories of their families. The exhibition catalogue for this upcoming show can be found at www.yaamaganu.com.au/exhibitions
Image: (From left) Kaltukatjara artists Rosalind Yibardi, Leonie Bennett, Marlene Connelly, Raylene Larry, Miriam Rennie, Julieanne Bourke, Marylin Bert, Dianne Wamantjangu, Christobell Protty, and Winsome Newberry with their two collaborative Kungka Kutjara canvases at Eagle Valley, NT, August 2022. Photo by Riley McPherson, courtesy Tjarlirli Art and Kaltukatjara Art.
“We’ve been waiting a long time for this power to come back … this is our art story now.”
Board member Sam Jampijinpa Mbitjana Dixon speaks to the development of the Utopia Art Centre with artists, culture, and history at its heart. The new look website features portraits by Rhett Hammerton, inspired by Utopia: A Picture Story (1990), echoing the foundational work and legacy of artists across the region.
www.utopiaartcentre.com.au
Image: Hazel Kngwarreye Morton, Janice Kngwarreye Morton, Ruby Kngwarreye Morton © Rhett Hammerton, courtesy of Utopia Art Centre.Tjanpi Desert Weavers artists, Dianne Ungukapi Golding, Yanyangkari Roma Butler and Cynthia Burke will present new major works in Really One Story: Art from the Ngaanyatjarra Lands at FORM Gallery, WA.
Pinirnpa (Ant Bed) honours the early days of fibre arts practice in the Ngaanyatjarra region. These large scale works reveal the quiet beauty of materials and colours from Country. Capturing the organic shapes and soft colours of the landscape is achieved through bush-dying processes and creative coiling techniques. Native barks, leaves and tree roots were collected to handdye wool and raffia woven into the artwork.
FORM Gallery will also present Kukaputju – The Hunter, a Tjanpi stop-motion animation which tells a story about feral cats on the Ngaanyatjarra lands.
Retail pieces, including fabulous feral cat sculptures, will be available for purchase throughout the exhibition.
Really one story: Art from the Ngaanyatjarra Lands.
2 March - 7 May 2023
FORM Gallery & Café
4 Shenton Road
Claremont WA 6010
Image: Yanyangkari Roma Butler (front), Cynthia Burke 2022. Image by Jade Brockley.Milpa artists, producing pilot cooking show!
Hand crafted puppets are cooking Butter Chicken in Tjuntjuntjara. This year the talented multimedia artists from the Milpa studio, a digital arts space run by the Spinifex Arts Project have been working on a Pitjantjatjara stop motion animation cooking show. The short animation film is set in a miniature replica of the the Tjuntjuntjara community’s Women Centre kitchen. Working from real photos the artists have modelled puppets, props and a movie set are created using recycled materials and polymer clay. The film was created by FM Donaldson, Maureen Donegan, Adelle Hogan, Naomi Felton, Janine Hogan, Kendrea Hogan, Pamela Hogan, Regina Lyons, Donna Mungee, Adrian Stevens, Loretta Stevens, Sherrie West, Dianne Thompson, Susan Young and Mathew York.
Milpa is a multi media arts space where young and old artists are employed on a project session basis to produce new artworks to create short animations and art films in local dialects including Pitjantjatjara.
Images: Dianne Thompson, Pamela Hogan and Regina Lyons shooting a short stop animation film.
Materials: Recycled materials, paint, foam, wood, paint, wire, polymer clay, material, paper, glue.
Dimensions: Vary, the Movie set 900mm x 600mm x 500mm. All photos taken and provided by Milpa, Spinifex Arts Project.
4–5 April Desart Art Centre Conference
6 May – 23 July Revealed Exhibition: New and Emerging WA Aboriginal Artists
2–9 July National NAIDOC week
11 August Telstra NATSIAA opening
11–13 August Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair
7 Sept Desert Mob opening (Exhibition and public programs
8 Sept Desert Mob Symposium
9 Sept Desert Mob Market Place
April/May
Part 1 – Introduction to SAM / Part 2 – Customers, Consignments & Sales
7 Sept – 22 Oct)
Part 3 – Products & Labelling / Part 4 – Advanced Admin / Stocktake Masterclass
Please contact training@sam.org.au to register interest in these sessions.
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