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Strong Women Strong Painting Strong Culture
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| Left to right: Iwana Ken (1937) Walytjitjara 2008 | Teresa Baker (1977) Wati Ngintaka 2011 | Anmanari Brown (1930s) The Seven Sisters 2009 | Sims & Dickson Collection |
Indigenous Women’s art of the Central and Western Deserts from the Sims Dickson Collection and from the UQ Anthropology Museum Collection
Curated by Deborah Sims and Matt Dickson in conjunction with the UQ Anthropology Museum
29 August 2014 - January 2015
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Tjampawa Kawiny (1921 - 2013) |
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Tjunkaya Tapaya
Batik 1989
Hand drawn wax resist, aniline dyes on silk 186 x 93cm
Ernabella SA
UQ Anthropology Museum Collection
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A quarter of this exhibition is drawn from the collection of the UQ Anthropology Museum and includes new acquisitions; work by Sally Mulda and Niningka Lewis that tell different kinds of stories; batiks made in the 1980s and ‘90s on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands by Tjunkaya Tapaya, Anna Curley, Patjiparan and Tjalumi Mervin. Women first learnt batik- drawing with wax and colouring with dyes - in 1971 at Ernabella. It is a medium for which they were well known until the recent resurgence of painting on canvas. We have hung batiks with paintings here allowing them to connect.
There are also crowbars from the Museum’s collection along with women’s camping and cooking equipment. Making some of these art works, the wooden sculptures called punu for example, is hard graft involving much digging with crowbar and shovel.
Perhaps the most culturally important work here is the three-quarter life size tjanpi / grass sculptural group of the Minyma Kutjara / Two Women. It shows events at a particular place; the women are resisting the man who has followed them. Materializing the figures of Ancestors like this for wider audiences is an innovation of the last few years.
Most of the artists are multi-lingual and do not use English as a first language.
Artists in this show are from the following language groups: Pitjantjatjara, Yankunytjatjara, Ngaanyatjarra, Kukatja, Pintupi, Warlpiri, Arrernte, Western Arrernte, Luritja, Anmatyerre and Alywarr. Of these Pitjantjatjara / Yankunytjatjara is the most common.
Go to Glossary (Pitjantjatjara)
Acknowledgements: Project curation/ curation of UQ Anthropology Museum component: Dr Diana Young; project co-ordination: Jane Willcock; museum assistants: Kiri Chan, Camella Hardjo and Charla Strelan; conservation: Kate Stanway; photography: Carl Warner; student assistants: Chris Lovell, Amelia Radke and Jen Rowe.
With many thanks to Deborah Sims and Matt Dickson.
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| Strong Women Strong Painting Strong Culture section | |||
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Glossary (Pitjantjatjara)Minyma - Woman |
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