Australian Aboriginal art
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Image:Aboriginal holllow log tombs02.jpg Image:Aboriginal holllow log tomb.jpg
Australian Aboriginal art refers to art done by Australian Aborigines, covering art that pre-dates European colonisation as well as contemporary art by Aborigines based on traditional culture. It is not restricted to merely paintings, but includes a wide variety of media including wood carving, sculpture and ceremonial clothing. To an extent, Aboriginal art also includes artistic embellishments found on weaponry and tools.
Art was one of the key elements of Aboriginal culture. Artwork was used to mark territory, record history, and tell stories. Rare ochres for paints were traded throughout northern Australia.
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Aboriginal painting
Image:Yankee Hat art-MJC.jpg Traditionally, paints were often made from water or spittle mixed with ochre and other rock pigments. Painting was then performed on persons, rock walls or bark (particular that of the paperbark gum). Tools used included primitive brushes, sticks, fingers and even a technique of spraying the paint directly out of the mouth onto the medium resulting in an effect similar to modern spraypaint.
There are a wide variety of styles of Aboriginal art. Three common types are X-ray art, in which the skeletons and viscera of the animals and humans portrayed are drawn inside the outline, as if by cross-section; dot-painting where intricate patterns, totems and/or stories are created using dots; and stencil art, particular using the motif of a handprint. More simple designs of straight lines, circles and spirals, with the occasional zig zag persist throughout the work of Australian Aborigines. These are thought to be the origins of "modern" Aboriginal Art.
One type of Aboriginal painting is known as the Bradshaws, some ancient rock art which appears on caves in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. They are named after the European pastoralist, Joseph Bradshaw, who discovered them in 1891.
Bark painting
The barest necessities for bark artwork are paint, brushes, bark, fixative and a fire. The bark chosen must be free of knots and other blemishes. It is best cut from the tree in the wet season when the sap is rising. Two horizontal slices and a single vertical slice are made into the tree, and the bark is then carefully peeled off with the aid of a sharpened tool. Only the inner smooth bark is kept and placed in a fire. After heating in the fire, the bark is flattened under foot and weighed with stones or logs to dry flat. The "canvas" is then ready to paint upon.
After the painting is completed, the bark is splinted at either end to keep the painting flat. A fixative, traditionally orchid juice, is added over top.
Carvings and sculpture
- Carved shells
- Mimih (or Mimi) small man-like carvings of mythological impish creatures. Mimihs are so frail that they never venture out on windy days lest they be swept away like leaf litter. If approached by men they will run into a rock crevice, if no crevice is there, the rocks themselves will open up and seal behind the Mimih.
- Necklaces and other jewellery
- Basket weaving
Other art
Image:Aboriginal art barramundi rock art.jpg Sand designs in desert areas of central Australia.
Religious and cultural aspects of Aboriginal art
Image:Uluru 2.JPG Traditional Aboriginal art almost always has a mythological undertone relating to the Dreamtime of Australian Aborigines. It originated around 500 years ago. Many modern purists will say if it doesn't contain the spirituality of aborigines, it is not true aboriginal art. Wenten Rubuntja, an Aboriginal landscape artist says it's hard to find any art that is devoid of spiritual meaning;
"Doesn't matter what sort of painting we do in this country, it still belongs to the people, all the people. This is worship, work, culture. It's all Dreaming. There are two ways of painting. Both ways are important, because that's culture." - source The Weekend Australian Magazine, April, 2002
Story telling and totem representation feature prominently in all forms of Aboriginal artwork. Additionally the female form, particularly the female womb in X-ray style features prominently in some famous sites in Arnhem Land.
Graffiti and other destructive influences
Many culturally significant sites of Aboriginal rock paintings have been gradually desecrated and destroyed by encroachment of early settlers and modern-day visitors. This includes the destruction of art by clearing and construction work, erosion caused by excessive touching of sites, and graffiti. Many sites now belonging to National Parks have to be strictly monitored by rangers, or closed off to the public permanently.
Modern Aboriginal Artists
In 1934 Australian painter Rex Batterbee taught Aboriginal artist Albert Namatjira western style watercolour landscape painting, along with other Aboriginal artists at the Hermannsburg mission in the Northern Territory. It became a popular style which sold out when the paintings were exhibited in Melbourne, Adelaide and other Australian cities. Namatjira became the first Aboriginal Australian citizen, as a result of his fame and popularity with these watercolour paintings.
In 1966, one of David Malangi's designs was produced on the Australian one dollar note, originally without his knowledge. The subsequent payment to him by the Reserve Bank marked the first case of Aboriginal copyright in Australian copyright law.
In 1971-1972, art teacher Geoffrey Bardon encouraged Aboriginal people in Papunya, north west of Alice Springs to put their Dreamtime stories onto canvases. These stories would previously have been drawn on the desert sand, and were now given a more permament form. Eventually the style, known as the Papunya Tula school, or sometimes popularly as 'dot art', became the most recognisable form of Australian Aboriginal painting. Much of the Aboriginal art on display in tourist shops traces back to this style developed at Papunya. The most famous of the artists to come from this movement was Clifford possum Tjapaltjarri. Also from this movement is Johnny Warangkula, whose Water Dreaming at Kalipinya twice sold at a record price, the second time being $486,500 in 2000.
In 1983 Warlpiri aborigines at Yuendumu began painting 36 doors at the school there with their dreamtime stories, which started an art movement there. In 1985 the Warlukwlangu artists association was founded at Yuendumu, which co-ordinates the artists in the area. The most well known painter from this movement is Paddy Japaljarri Stewart.
In 1988 an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander memorial was unveiled at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra made from 200 hollow log coffins, which are similar to the type used for mortuary ceremonies in Arnhem Land. It was made for the bicentenary of Australia's colonisation, and is in remembrance of Aboriginal people who had died protecting their land during conflict with settlers. Made by 43 artists from Ramingining and communities nearby. The path running through the middle of it represents the Glyde River.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the work of Emily Kngwarreye became very popular. Although she had been involved in craftwork for most of her life, it was only when she was in her 80s that she was recognised as a painter. She was from the Utopia community north east of Alice Springs. The period of her life when she was painting was only for a few years near the end of her life. Her styles which changed every year, have been seen as a mixture of traditional Aboriginal and contemporary Australian.
Rover Thomas is another well known modern Australian Aboriginal artist. Born in Western Australia, he represented Australia in the Venice Biennale of 1991. He knew and encouraged another well known artist to paint, Queenie McKenzie, from the East Kimberley region.
List of contemporary Aboriginal artists
- Albert Namatjira
- Wenten Rubuntja
- Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri
- Dorothy Napangardi
- Rover Thomas
- Naata Nungurrayi
- Emily Kngwarreye
- Paddy Japaljarri Stewart
Famous sites of Aboriginal art
These are very significant sites.
See also
References
- Ruff C (2002) "I sing for my land" in The Weekend Australian Magazine, April 27–28
External links
- ABC Message Stick Online - Indigenous gateway
- Indigenous Australian Arts and Culture Online
- Blackarts - theatre, music, literature, film and culture
- Indigenous Australian Music and Musicians
- Indigenous Australian Literature
- Indigenous Australian Festivals and Culture
- Indigenous Australian Performance and Performers
- Indigenous Australian Visual Arts and Artists
- Indigenous Australian Links
- Meaning of symbols found in Aboriginal art
- Cooinda Gallery of Aboriginal art
- Art of Australia
- Indigenous Dreamings
- Information about many Central Australian artists, in English and German
- Germaine Greer on Aboriginal art
- Oscar's sketchbook -- pencil drawings by a young Aboriginal man in the late 1800s at the National Museum of Australiabg:Аборигенско изкуство
fr:Art des aborigènes d'Australie it:Arte aborigena sr:Уметност домородачких народа Аустралије