NN0612167
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
122 x 183cm | 48.03 x 72.05in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1002105
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
153 x 122cm | 60.24 x 48.03in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN0807042 (2008)
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
153 x 122cm | 60.24 x 48.03in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1009121 (2010)
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
122 x 122cm | 48.03 x 48.03in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1007092
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
122 x 61cm | 48.03 x 24.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1109143
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
91 x 46cm | 35.83 x 18.11in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1208088
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
107 x 28cm | 42.13 x 11.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1208113
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
87 x 28cm | 34.25 x 11.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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NN1207098
Acrylic on Belgian Linen
87 x 28cm | 34.25 x 11.02in
Papunya Tula Artists
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Ningura Napurrula was born in 1938 at Watulka in Central Australia.
She married the renowned Pintupi artist Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi, and together with their son Maurice, travelled to the Papunya community in the 1960s, after having encountered a Welfare Patrol.
Ningura Napurrula commenced painting for the Papunya Tula Artists Cooperative in 1996.
Ningura’s aesthetic is somewhat different from other Kintore women, as she has developed Yala Yala Gibbs’s classic Pintupi style into her own softer, more organic vision.
Ningura Napurrrula paints very delicately, slowly building up her forms, as she recalls the mythological events of her Ancestors.
Her subject matter focuses on the travels of her female Ancestors, the sacred sites that they passed, and the mythological significance of the bush tucker that they collected.
These travels and rituals help to explain contemporary customs and the ceremonial lives of these powerful Pintupi women.
.Ningura Napurrula was born in 1938 at Watulka in Central Australia.
She married the renowned Pintupi artist Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi, and together with their son Maurice, travelled to the Papunya community in the 1960s, after having encountered a Welfare Patrol.
Ningura Napurrula commenced painting for the Papunya Tula Artists Cooperative in 1996.
Ningura’s aesthetic is somewhat different from other Kintore women, as she has developed Yala Yala Gibbs’s classic Pintupi style into her own softer, more organic vision.
Ningura Napurrrula paints very delicately, slowly building up her forms, as she recalls the mythological events of her Ancestors.
Her subject matter focuses on the travels of her female Ancestors, the sacred sites that they passed, and the mythological significance of the bush tucker that they collected.
These travels and rituals help to explain contemporary customs and the ceremonial lives of these powerful Pintupi women.
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