NN1501051
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
122 x 61cm | 48.03 x 24.02in (irregular)
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1505055
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 46cm | 35.83 x 18.11in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1602073
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 46cm | 35.83 x 18.11in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1511032 (2015)
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 46cm | 35.83 x 18.11in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1512005
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 46cm | 35.83 x 18.11in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1410112
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
107 x 28cm | 42.13 x 11.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1603080
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
61 x 31cm | 24.02 x 12.2in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1604008
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
61 x 31cm | 24.02 x 12.2in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1602054
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 61cm | 35.83 x 24.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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ReDot Fine Art Gallery is honoured to welcome back, after a one-year hiatus, the 12th and 13th exhibitions of stunning Contemporary art from the trail-blazing Indigenously owned art centre, Papunya Tula Artists Pty. Ltd. These joint solo exhibitions firmly cement the position of this corner-stone of the modern Indigenous Art Movement and also represent a poignant look back at the work of one of their recently deceased doyenne and a refreshing and encouraging peek into the future. This stunning collection of over 45 works by two gifted artists from Australia’s vast Western Desert, graphically depicts their strong connection to land, culture and family.
Ningura Napurrula was born at Watulka, south of the Kiwirrkurra Community, circa 1938 and was one of the earliest pioneer female painters of the company, completing her first paintings for Papunya Tula Artists in 1996. By 1999 Ningura had already amassed an impressive exhibition profile and was becoming a hugely successful and collectable artist and in 2003 she was chosen, along with four other Papunya Tula Artists, to have one of her paintings represented on an Australia Post international stamp. Arguably her finest moment came in 2004 when Ningura was one of eight Indigenous artists selected to have an example of their work incorporated into the architecture of the Musée du quai Branly in Paris and her ceiling oeuvre opened to the public in June 2006. Ningura passed away at Kintore in November 2013.
Nanyuma was born in the vicinity of Kiwirrkurra, close to Ningura’s birth place in approximately 1944 and despite only being a few years younger than Ningura her painting career has followed a more modest early trajectory, though in 1999 Nanyuma did also contribute to the Kiwirrkurra women’s painting.
Whilst their respective styles show close, interconnected, harmonious story-telling that’s central to the Pintupi culture, their styles also offer dramatically different painterly execution. Ningura adopted a more expansive/figurative approach to the songlines of her maternal lineage, the highly spiritual and secretive birth ceremonies of her mother, sometimes rough and seemingly haphazard in its rendering. Nanyuma conversely delivers more controlled dotting, using the stunning techniques mastered by her community colleagues such as Yukultji Napangati and Doreen Reid Nakamarra. The natural usage of positive and negative space to create pulsating lines of “tali” depicts her own important ceremonial stories. This style marries effortlessly with Ningura’s epic renditions of the genesis of life and these painstakingly produced complex paintings all augur a bright future with the masterly old being blended into the refreshingly new.
The exhibitions begin on Wednesday 5 October and runs until Saturday 12 November 2016. It will be attended in person by Ben Danks, Assistant Manager of Papunya Tula Artists Pty. Ltd. for the official opening on Friday 7 October 2016 at 6:30pm.