Seed Dreaming with Water – Ngurlu Jukurrpa Ngapa-kurlu

This dreaming story belongs to Jakamarra/Jupurrurla and Nakamarra/Napurrurla groups. It is about Miyamiya country. This part of the story is about water that lies in rock holes, deep in the rocky hills. Families sit by the rock holes to drink the valuable water. Women and children are there together. They sit by the rock holes and eat seeds that they have collected, and drink the cool water.

$5,820.00

1 in stock

Medium: Painting
1800 x 1500mm Synthetic Polymer Paint on Canvas
Year: 2023
SKU: 445-20

Description

This dreaming story belongs to Jakamarra/Jupurrurla and Nakamarra/Napurrurla groups. It is about Miyamiya country. This part of the story is about water that lies in rock holes, deep in the rocky hills. Families sit by the rock holes to drink the valuable water. Women and children are there together. They sit by the rock holes and eat seeds that they have collected, and drink the cool water.

Additional information

Weight 0.8 kg

About Molly Tasman

Napurrurla grew up in the Tanami Desert and lived at Mt Doreen, Yarturlu-yarturlu and Yurrampi. She lived a traditional life style as a young child. She was moved to Lajamanu with her family when the government relocated people to the new community in the 1950s. She was dedicated to the preservation of her culture and works tirelessly to this end. She taught children in school bilingual education programs for many years. Her artistic talents were widely respected among her peers and those who knew her. Art is a way of preserving and expressing culture in a meaningful way. Napurrurla loved to paint and found a lot of freedom in this form of expression, showing her gentle feminine personality in her work, which is delightful to most viewers of the art she creates. Napurrurla was a desert lady who has travelled by foot along the paths of her dreaming stories, and whose creations were from her soul. Napurrurla's art has been featured in exhibitions all over Australia since 1992, and she was a finalist in the 2008 & 2011 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards.  She has left an important legacy in her art to her family and all Warlpiri.

See other works from Molly Tasman