Nellie Stewart - Irrunytju - 122 x 78 cm - 10405 (sold)
Nellie Stewart - Irrunytju - 122 x 78 cm - 10405 (sold)
Artiste : Nellie Stewart
Titre de l'œuvre : Irrunytju
Format : 122 x 78 cm
Provenance et certificat : centre d'art aborigène de Tjungu Palya
Référence de cette peinture aborigène : 10405
Explications pour cette peinture Aborigène :
Nellie Stewart (1930-2011) was born in the bush at Pipalyatjara, her father's country. Her mother is from Irrunytju. As a girl she attended school at Ernabella Mission and later worked in Alice Springs teaching Pitjantjatjara language with her husband. She began painting in 2007 when she moved to Nyapari with her family.
This painting is connected to the Minyma Tutjara Tjukurpa (The Two Sisters creation story). The two sisters were at Irrunytju and they made a wana (digging stick) which they used in their scared ceremonies and dancing. They performed the Inma (dancing) for some time and then headed to Ngurapila. Tjukurpa mulapa (this is a true story). Nyangatja ngayuku ngunytjuku ngura (this is my mother's country).
As stressed by the Dr Christine Nicholls : “Typically Nellie Stewart uses a technique of over-painting a dark background, using brushstrokes in ways that evoke ceremonial body painting designs onto dark skin. Stewart uses her brush in ways akin to women using their fingers to smear layers of paint onto the darker background, in preparation for women-only ceremonies (inma). The mark making, such an integral part of women's body painting, also plays a decisive role in Nellie Stewart's artwork”.
You can find artworks by the artist in the prestigious following collections :
National Gallery Victoria, Melbourne. VIC
The Corrigan Collection, NSW
Maroondah Art Gallery, Ringwood, Victoria
Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, QLD
Marchall Collection, Adelaide, SA
Lagerburg-Swift Collection, Perth, WA
W & V McGeoch Collection, Melbourne VIC
Artbank, Australian Government National Contemporary Art
© Photo : Aboriginal Signature Estrangin gallery with the courtesy of the artists and Tjungu Palya.