Artist | WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Artist | WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)



WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Tapu


106/07
Atelier Acrylic Paint on 14oz Canvas
90 x 90cm | 35.43 x 35.43in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Jilji


pc517/04
Atelier Artist Acrylic on 11oz Cotton Duck
120 x 60cm | 47.24 x 23.62in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Pirntiti Warla


291/07
Atelier Acrylic Paint on 14oz Canvas
60 x 120cm | 23.62 x 47.24in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Mukurutu


108/07
Atelier Acrylic Paint on 14oz Canvas
60 x 120cm | 23.62 x 47.24in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Pirntirri


826/08
Atelier Artist Acrylic, 250gsm Velin Arches Paper
76 x 112cm | 29.92 x 44.09in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Ngarrangkarni


273/12
Derivan Matisse Acrylic - 280gsm Velin BFK Rives
76 x 112cm | 29.92 x 44.09in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Pamarr


200/12
Atelier Artist Acrylic, 250gsm Velin Arches Paper
75 x 105cm | 29.53 x 41.34in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Wirrikarjarti


wp030/96
Derivan Matisse Acrylic - 280gsm Velin BFK Rives
76 x 105cm | 29.92 x 41.34in
Mangkaja Artists

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WAKARTU CORY SURPRISE (dec)

Pamarr


53/12 (2012)
Derivan Matisse Acrylic - 280gsm Velin BFK Rives
75 x 105cm | 29.53 x 41.34in
Mangkaja Artists

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I was born at Tapu in the Great Sandy desert around 1929. Tapu is my father’s country and Kurtal is my mother’s country. My parents died when I was a baby. I grew up at Wayampajarti and that is my country now. I don’t remember my mummy or daddy. They passed away in the desert. When I was crawling my sister-in-law Trixie took me to Christmas Creek. I was promised to one old man who had two wives. We had no clothes when we went in. We were frightened of the Station Manager so we ran away from that place. Two times we ran away to the desert.

I walked out from the bush as a young woman with my two brothers. We were living at Wayampajarti and around that country there. At Wayampajarti there is a jila [permanent waterhole] where Kalpartu [an ancestral snake] lives. When we lived out in the bush we learnt the law. We learnt where the water is, where our country is and where to ï¬nd food. You have to be careful not to go to the wrong places because you might make the Kalpurtu [spirit snake] angry or them other ones like Kukurr Murungkurr Parlangan. You could make other people angry too. You need permission to go to other people’s country.

I went to the desert with my husband to look for kumanjayi [deceased] Pijaju out there, then we all came back for ceremony. My husband did contract work building fences. I followed him on those contracts. I worked as a camp cook. I cooked food for big mobs of people. I cleaned, cooked and milked goats. We worked at Quanbun Downs, Jubilee Station, Yiyili and Cherrabun Station. Then I lived mainly at one place, GoGo Station (near Fitzroy Crossing) until I was old. I came to Fitzroy Crossing in the 1950s. I have a big mob of kids and some of them have passed away now.

I ï¬rst started painting at Karrayili Adult Education Centre in the early eighties. We told our stories through painting and learned to speak to kartiya [European person]. I also did painting at Bayulu community near Fitzroy Crossing. That’s how I told my story to kartiya. We worked on paper then, not canvas or board.

When I paint, I think about my country, and where I have been travelling across that country. I paint from here (points to head - thinking about country) and here (points to breasts, collarbone and shoulder blades - which is a reference to body painting). I think about my people, the old people and what they told me and jumangkarni [Dreamtime]. When I paint I am thinking about law from a long time ago. I like painting, it’s good. I get pamarr [word for rock, stone money] for it. I can buy my food, tyres and ï¬x my car. I give some money to my family and I keep some for myself.

Nobody taught me how to paint, I put down my own ideas. I saw these places for myself, I went there with the old people. I paint jilji [sand hills], jumu [soak water], jila [permanent waterhole], jiwari [rock hole], pamarr [hills and rock country], I think about mangarri [vegetable food] and kuyu [game] from my country and when I was there.



I was born at Tapu in the Great Sandy desert around 1929. Tapu is my father’s country and Kurtal is my mother’s country. My parents died when I was a baby. I grew up at Wayampajarti and that is my country now. I don’t remember my mummy or daddy. They passed away in the desert. When I was crawling my sister-in-law Trixie took me to Christmas Creek. I was promised to one old man who had two wives. We had no clothes when we went in. We were frightened of the Station Manager so we ran away from that place. Two times we ran away to the desert.

I walked out from the bush as a young woman with my two brothers. We were living at Wayampajarti and around that country there. At Wayampajarti there is a jila [permanent waterhole] where Kalpartu [an ancestral snake] lives. When we lived out in the bush we learnt the law. We learnt where the water is, where our country is and where to ï¬nd food. You have to be careful not to go to the wrong places because you might make the Kalpurtu [spirit snake] angry or them other ones like Kukurr Murungkurr Parlangan. You could make other people angry too. You need permission to go to other people’s country.

I went to the desert with my husband to look for kumanjayi [deceased] Pijaju out there, then we all came back for ceremony. My husband did contract work building fences. I followed him on those contracts. I worked as a camp cook. I cooked food for big mobs of people. I cleaned, cooked and milked goats. We worked at Quanbun Downs, Jubilee Station, Yiyili and Cherrabun Station. Then I lived mainly at one place, GoGo Station (near Fitzroy Crossing) until I was old. I came to Fitzroy Crossing in the 1950s. I have a big mob of kids and some of them have passed away now.

I ï¬rst started painting at Karrayili Adult Education Centre in the early eighties. We told our stories through painting and learned to speak to kartiya [European person]. I also did painting at Bayulu community near Fitzroy Crossing. That’s how I told my story to kartiya. We worked on paper then, not canvas or board.

When I paint, I think about my country, and where I have been travelling across that country. I paint from here (points to head - thinking about country) and here (points to breasts, collarbone and shoulder blades - which is a reference to body painting). I think about my people, the old people and what they told me and jumangkarni [Dreamtime]. When I paint I am thinking about law from a long time ago. I like painting, it’s good. I get pamarr [word for rock, stone money] for it. I can buy my food, tyres and ï¬x my car. I give some money to my family and I keep some for myself.

Nobody taught me how to paint, I put down my own ideas. I saw these places for myself, I went there with the old people. I paint jilji [sand hills], jumu [soak water], jila [permanent waterhole], jiwari [rock hole], pamarr [hills and rock country], I think about mangarri [vegetable food] and kuyu [game] from my country and when I was there.



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