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  1. What's On
  2. Exhibitions

Amata Women’s Paintings

Kunmanara Kawiny (Artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia c.1921 2013 / Mona Mitakikil Shepherd (Collaborating artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia b.1954 / Tjimpayie Prestley (Collaborating artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia b.1967 / Seven sisters 2011 / Synthetic polymer paint on linen / Purchased 2012 with funds from Margaret Mittelheuser, AM, and Cathryn Mittelheuser, AM, through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery / © The artists

Kunmanara Kawiny (Artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia c.1921 2013 / Mona Mitakikil Shepherd (Collaborating artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia b.1954 / Tjimpayie Prestley (Collaborating artist), Pitjantjatjarra people, Australia b.1967 / Seven sisters 2011 / Synthetic polymer paint on linen / Purchased 2012 with funds from Margaret Mittelheuser, AM, and Cathryn Mittelheuser, AM, through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery / © The artists / View full image

When

20 Feb – 4 Nov 2018

Where

Queensland Art Gallery & Watermall

About

Tjala Arts is a leader in the vibrant contemporary Indigenous Western Desert painting movement. Located in the remote settlement of Amata, on the Anangu Pitjantjatjarra Yankunytjatjarra (APY) lands of north-western South Australia, Tjala Arts is the artistic hub of the community and known for its diverse range of styles, energetic mark making and rich colourful palette.

In 2011 QAGOMA commissioned three generations of Tjala women to paint seven works for the collection. In these canvases, the artists explore dynamic, fresh, stylistic expressions of their culture and ngurra (country). The paintings are connected via two main narratives: the Dreaming story of the Seven Sisters – a well-recognised star cluster called the Pleiades or commonly the Seven Sisters which is also embedded in the local rocks and trees, and in images painted on cave walls – and the story of Tjala Tjukurpa, the ancestral honey ant whose tracks wind through the valley where Amata lies.

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Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art

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