Contemporary Aboriginal Art
Rare artworks from an unsurpassed collection evoke the inner lives and secret rites of Australia’s indigenous people
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
In the third period, the art found a commercial market with acclaimed, large-scale canvases in the 1980s. And the fourth period, roughly from the 1990s to the present, includes lower-quality commercial paintings—disparaged by some art dealers as “dots for dollars”—that slake the tourist demand for souvenirs. Some painters today lay down geometric, Aboriginal-style markings without any underlying secret to disguise. (There have even been cases of fake Aboriginal art produced by backpackers.)
Still, much fine work continues to be produced. “I’m very optimistic, because I think it’s amazing that it has lasted as long as it has,” Myers says. Roger Benjamin, a University of Sydney art historian who curated the exhibition, “Icons of the Desert,” says gloomy predictions of the late ‘80s have not been borne out: “Fewer and fewer of the original artists were painting, and people thought the movement was dying out. That didn’t happen.”
One striking change is that many Aboriginal painters today are women, who have their own stories and traditions to recount. “The women painting in Papunya Tula now tend to use stronger colors and—especially the older ladies—are less meticulous,” Benjamin says.
Though seemingly abstract, the multilayered paintings reflect the Aboriginal experience of reading the veiled secrets of the hostile desert—divining underground water and predicting where plants will reappear in the spring. According to Aboriginal mythology, the desert has been marked by the movements of legendary ancestors—the wanderings known as Dreamings—and an initiate can recall the ancestral stories by studying and decoding the terrain. “In the bush, when you see somebody making a painting, they often break into song,” Benjamin says. They’re singing the Dreaming stories in their paintings.
The Wilkersons’ original plan to exhibit paintings in Australian museums fell through after curators feared that Aboriginal women or boys might be exposed to sacred imagery. Aboriginal community members also decreed that nine reproductions could not be included in the exhibition catalog. (The American edition contains a supplement with the banned images. Smithsonian was not granted the right to publish any of them.)
While Western art collectors may value the works according to how well they were executed, Aboriginal people tend to rank them by the importance of the Dreaming in them. “White people can’t understand our painting, they just see a ‘pretty picture,’ “ the Papunya artist Michael Tjakamarra Nelson once remarked.
Some of the imagery in the exhibition is comprehensible to informed outsiders, while some is ambiguous or completely opaque. For many Western spectators, the secret religious content of the paintings—including, in the early boards, images said to be fatal to uninitiated Aboriginal people—only adds to their appeal. Like much geometrically ordered art, Aboriginal painting is beautiful. Tantalizingly, it also exudes mystery and danger.
New York City-based freelance journalist Arthur Lubow last wrote for Smithsonian about China’s terra cotta soldiers.
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Comments (6)
If you are interested in very fine Aboriginal Art, please visit our website
www.artsdaustralie.com
and do check the following major artists : Dennis Nona, Kathleen petyarre, Abie Loy Kemarre....
Warmest regards
Posted by jacob on October 6,2011 | 09:11 AM
My parents bought Aboriginal Bark Paintings in the early 1970's in Australia; can you put me in touch with someone to find out if the paintings should be donated to a museum?
Thanks,
Deb Kaufman
Posted by Debbie Kaufman on August 9,2010 | 06:44 PM
Oooohoooohoooooh... May I play the interpretation game, too?
I think Medicine Story (page 70) draws on a legend in the making about two wealthy collectors (shown as two vertical phalluses), a cunning artist (lying down laughing at the bottom) and stacks of coins (circles) that are raining and draining down upon him. The collectors are separated by windows portraying a mansion, but connected by slim organs. Laugh lines run off the canvas at the bottom, while the artist makes a plan to exit left "walkabout" through the window of opportunity he has created through the bleak blackness of his pre-artistic condition.
Way to go, Uta Uta Tjangala!
Irwin Schuster
Posted by Irwin Schuster on January 13,2010 | 08:37 PM
Every Aboriginal art is a story. There is an iPhone app called "Dreamtime" which shows a series of Aboriginal artwork along with their stories as described by the artist. It is very good.
Posted by John Middendorf on January 6,2010 | 06:34 PM
Aboriginal Art is more than an art movement.
In 1995 I produced a video on Aboriginal Art for Crystal Productions that explored prehistoric cave art to today’s contemporary paintings. Acrylic paint is the reason Aboriginal art is now produced for commercial success.
Art was an essential ingredient of Aboriginal life permeating every aspect, both ceremonial and secular. The elders, who were also the artists, painted these legends of creation.
Since the early 1900's the demands of anthropologists, researchers and collectors for portable works of art have stimulated the production of bark paintings translated into acrylic works of art.
The Chromacryl company of Australia donated paint and canvas board to the natives so that the indigenous people could make a living. The artists have adapted to a lucrative form of communication and raised their level in society to innovators and leaders.
Three major techniques were used by many different clans.
The cross-hatched “Mimi” patterns identify clans in Western Arnham Land.. The mimi spirits were the predecessors of the present day Aborigines. The stick-like figures represented animated mimi spirit people, magic-makers.
X-ray paintings are essentially static and show the external form and what cannot be seen: the skeleton of an animal, the stomach, the heart, lungs and other organs. The paintings are used for hunting and fishing magic and also for teaching.
In central Australia ground paintings provide the models for acrylic dot paintings on canvas and board which initially emerged around 1970.
Aboriginal artists can now support their lives through their art. The artists express Aboriginal values and perspectives to a world which continues to be hostile to Aboriginal aspirations. The issues of dispossession, broken families, racism and an intensification of the sense of cultural identity provide strong motivation for today’s painting compositions.
Posted by MARILYNNE BRADLEY on January 6,2010 | 03:22 PM
We visited that Melbourne gallery in late 90's. We were entertained for hours by the manager with the stories depiclted in the paintings.We purchaced a canvass entitled "Fertility" by woman artist.
Posted by Mary Ann O'Brien on December 27,2009 | 08:14 PM