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Lot 45: PADDY TJAMATJI (JAMPIN) , CIRCA 1912-1996 KIMBERLEY RANGES WITH WHITE FELLA'S ROAD Natural earth pigments on composition board

Est: $30,000 AUD - $50,000 AUDSold:
Sotheby'sSydney, AustraliaNovember 25, 2007

Item Overview

Description

Natural earth pigments on composition board

Dimensions

60.5 by 120.5 cm

Provenance

Painted at Warmun, Turkey Creek 1987
Private collection, acquired directly from the artist

Notes

Cf. For a painting by the artist that refers to the presence of Europeans in the Kimberley in a similar composition, see Wulangkuya, hills visible from Turkey Creek, 1984, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, in Caruana, W. (ed), Windows on the Dreaming: Aboriginal Paintings in the Australian National Gallery, Australian National Gallery and Ellsyd Press, Canberra and Sydney, 1989, p.174, plate 102, illus; see also Djuwarlin - Mount House Station Gap and aerodrome, n.d., in the Holmes à Court Collection, in Akerman, K., "I bin paintin' first." Paddy Jaminji - trail-blazing artist of the Warmun school of Aboriginal art, Holmes à Court Gallery, Perth, 2004, illus; The Rainbow Snake, Galiru, 1983, in the collection of the Berndt Museum, in Stanton, J. E., Painting the Country: Contemporary Aboriginal art from the Kimberley region, Western Australia, The University of Western Australia Press, Nedlands, 1989, p.37, plate 33, illus One of the artist's last paintings before he succumbed to trachoma, Tjamatji was particularly concerned about matters of cultural maintenance among the Gija people. His role as painter of the boards carried in the first Gurirr Gurirr ceremonies from the late 1970s onwards led him to initiate the east Kimberley school of painting at Warmun (Turkey Creek), where he insisted on using traditional pigments and binders to emphasise the cultural integrity of the paintings. He eventually painted subjects other than those relating to the ritual including several that place evidence of European presence within the context of the Kimberley landscape and Gija law. As in Wulangkuya, hills visible from Turkey Creek, 1984 (see above), the horizontal across the lower section of the painting represents a bitumen road

Auction Details

Aboriginal and Oceanic Art

by
Sotheby's
November 25, 2007, 12:00 PM EST

118-122 Queen Street Woollahra, Sydney, NSW, 2025, AU