Lot 122
  • 122

KAYILI ARTISTS

Estimate
100,000 - 150,000 AUD
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Description

  • Kayili Artists
  • YUNPALARA (LAKE BLAIR) MARY GIBSON NAKAMARRAborn 1952NORMA GILES NAKAMARRAborn 1952JANIE WARD NAKAMARRA /KARIMARRAborn 1946ESTHER GILES NAMPITJINPAborn 1940DOROTHY WARD NANGALAborn 1959NGIPI WARD NAPANGARTI /KARIMARRAborn 1949GUMBYA GIRGIDBANUNGURRAYIborn 1933MATJIWA JONES NUNGURRAYIborn 1946MARGARET JENNINGSPANAKAborn 1939PULPURRU DAVIES PURUNGU /NAPANGATIborn 1943COILEY CAMPBELLTJAKAMARRAborn 1936PATRICIA WARD TJAURURRUborn 1978
  • Synthetic polymer paint on canvas
  • 222.5 by 210.5 cm

Provenance

Painted for Kayili Artists, Western Australia  in 2005

Exhibited

UWA Perth International Arts Festival, February- March 2007
Power an Beauty: Indigenous Art Now, Heidi Museum of Modern Art, 17 November 2007 - 10 March 2008

Literature

Power an Beauty: Indigenous Art Now, Heidi Museum of Modern Art, Bulleen, Victoria, 2007, illus.

Condition

The painting is in good and stable condition with no visible repairs or restoration. There is no loss of paint to the canvas surface.
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."

Catalogue Note

Kayili Artists is the local art centre for the Ngaanyatjarra and Ngaatjatjarra people at Patjarr (Karilywarra) in the Gibson Desert, a community located some 250 kms north of Warburton, in Western Australia. The art centre was established in 2004.

The artists of the Gibson Desert have been painting in the public domain for a few short years. They form part of the Western Desert cultural bloc, and their art is consistent with the visual language popularized initially by the artists at Papunya from the early 1970s. The conventional graphic lexicon of desert art is evident here, based on sets of roundels or concentric circles indicating place, and lines that join them indicating travel or paths. Artists tend to favour high key, saturated colour, and, as in this case, informal compositions, to create exuberant, pulsating visual surfaces

Yunpalara (Lake Blair), 2005 is a collaboration between twelve senior artists at Kayili. The painting describes an epic ancestral chronicle concerning the Ngirntaka Tjukurrpa (Perentie Dreaming) and the giant goanna's encounter with a large group of Karlaya (Emu ancestors). Ngirntaka was at Yunpalara, a large claypan surrounded by sandhills to the west of Patjarr. The Perentie, who originally came from the area now known as Well 33 on the Canning Stock Route, created the site of Yunpalara with a sweep of his large tail. At Tjinytjira, west of Patjarr, the Emu ancestors had gathered from far and wide to conduct ceremonies. Fearing he had been insulted by the Emu ancestors, Ngirntaka attacked the group and dispersed them across the landscape

Kayili Artists accompanying notes outlining the circumstances of the creation of this work read as follows:

"Yunpalara (Lake Blair) a large claypan in the Gibson Desert Nature Reserve is Coiley Campbell's country. The Reserve was the destination for the first of several painting trips during June and July of 2005 and although it was to be a ladies group painting, it was Mr Campbell who applied the first marks to canvas, turning into the centre piece, the concentric circle in the middle. Initially, not a lot of painting happened but there was lots of hunting. The ladies all worked from the edge inwards and it was Ngipi Ward who broke out and stretched her coloured tentacles towards the centre.

The work started to take more shape on the second week long camp at Mina Mina, about 15 km from Patjarr. After a week at Mina Mina the clouds rolled in and it was a black horizon. Camp was packed up quickly, everything was thrown in the back of the troopie and the trailer, and any car that was there, the painting was thrown on top, wet with paint and tied to the trailer.

Back in Patjarr it started to rain just as we arrived. The rain settled in for three days. The canvas was unrolled in the old tin house used as an Art Centre. Two light globes where installed, blankets where brought in, the heater was taken from the office, the doors and windows where closed, ladies came and went from the building.

After three days the rain passed and the winter desert sky was crystal clear and the sun was at its watery best. From the closed doors of the art centre emerged a nearly finished painting followed by excited ladies. A sheltered place in the sun next to an empty shed was found, the painting was laid out and all hands were on deck. Over a period of three months and several trips to different country, the work was completed to the smell of cooking chops and smiling proud faces".