The moving desert
This is wonderful. We're back here in our own Country, our traditional Country.
Ngumarnu Norma Giles, Warburton, 2008
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Parnngurr community seen from Parnngurr hill. Photo: Tim Acker, 2009.
Throughout the twentieth century, social, cross-cultural and ecological pressures have pulled Aboriginal people from their homelands and pushed them into the settlements that fringed the desert.
People were drawn to the Canning Stock Route by the lure of beef, flour, sugar and tobacco, although conflict and fear sometimes drove them away. While some families followed the drovers and found new lives at the stations and missions, others kept their distance.
Droughts in the desert in the mid-twentieth century made life very difficult in some areas. At such times the stock route missions and stations were seen as reliable sources of food and water, and so became increasingly attractive. Some people gravitated towards these settlements out of necessity, others out of curiosity about the changes occurring at the edges of their desert world.
For others, it was loneliness that brought them in from the desert. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the few remaining groups came in; often they had come looking for their walyja, their families. One of the last major migrations of Martu people occurred in 1963, when several of the artists featured in this exhibition decided to move to Jigalong.
The movement of people away from the stock route Country had a huge impact on desert society. Having settled on distant missions and stations, people were separated not only from their Country but also from their extended families.
But the desert people never stopped thinking about their Country. With the recognition of land rights and native title in the 1980s, people started to return to Country to set up their own communities. Places such as Mulan, Kunawarritji, Parnngurr and Patjarr were created out of the will of people to live in their own Country again.
In these remote places there is little access to the mainstream economy, and art has become an integral part of the cultural and economic lives of the Aboriginal people who live there. The relationship between art and Country remains vital. This section explores the artists from one community, Patjarr, and the relation between their art, their Country and their community life.
Kayili Artists
We decided to set up an art centre to be based at Karilwara [Patjarr], our family's traditional home. We were the ones who started this and we want it to be strong always. Strong art centre - strong community. Future generations will still be here painting.
Ngumarnu Norma Giles, Warburton, 2008
Kayili artists live at Patjarr, seemingly a long way from the Canning Stock Route. But like their families further north and west, these artists spent the first part of their lives in their Country around the Gibson and southern Great Sandy deserts. They have particularly strong family connections to Papunya Tula Artists at Kiwirrkurra, Martumili Artists at Parnngurr and Jigalong, and Birriliburu Artists in Wiluna.
While many of these families initially walked east to Jigalong mission or north to Balgo, Kayili artists such as Jackie Giles and Pulpurru Davies walked south to Warburton mission. It was from there that they would later set out to found their own community - and art centre - at Patjarr.
Purrungu, 2008
Jackie Giles, Kayili Artists, acrylic on linen, 152 x 101.5 cm
Purrungu, a rock hole, is home to a giant jila (snake). The lines on this painting represent the path of the snake travelling underground. People have to close their eyes and not look into the water when they drink here. If they hear a rumble or if the ground begins to vibrate, it means that the snake is approaching, and everyone has to leave very quickly.
Mr Giles was the first one to start [painting]. We spread the blanket and we started painting and many watched. I watched and I learnt from him and started doing it myself. But he had no brushes. He only used his hands at the beginning. They used to watch our hands and how we painted and think, 'How are they doing it with no brush, only hands!'
Ngumarnu Norma Giles, Warburton, 2008
Minyma Kutjarra (Two Women), 2008
Pulpurru Davies,Kayili Artists, acrylic on linen, 100.5 x 151.7 cm
In this painting two ancestral women, the Minyma Kutjarra, encounter two men, the Wati Kutjarra. The men watch the women cry and sing. One of them has lost her special white dog. She wails and asks her companion, 'Where are we going to look? Where can he be?' as they walk in circles looking for it.
Kapitu Kapitu, 2008
Norma Giles, Kayili Artists, acrylic on linen, 101 x 150.8 cm
We lived in the bush We grew up eating kangaroo and emu We lived oblivious to [the] white man and his world.
Kapitu kapitu means 'water to water', and this painting represents the journey of Norma's grandfathers and grandmothers to various rock holes in their Country. These rock holes include Patjarr, Wirtut, Kurrpulu, Kunungurra, Pandaltjarra, Kalipi, Yalata, Tika Tika, Kulkardartja and Talila. The U-shapes represent two men; the oblong shape between them is their wiltja (bush shelter).
After living here [Warburton] we went back to our traditional Country and painted our Country. Always painting our Country.
