Accession No
2013.219
Description
Three-coloured etching by Lily Karadada, titled 'Wandjina and Bush Turkeys', 2009. Presentation Proof. Wandjina are squat ancestral spirits with a distinctive halo-style band of colour around the head found on the rock art of the Kimberley region
Place
Oceania; Australasia; Australia; Victoria; Melbourne
Period
Source
Australian Print Workshop [vendor]; Art Fund [monetary donor]; Esmée Fairbairn Foundation [monetary donor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
2013.219
Cultural Affliation
Material
Paper; Pigment
Local Term
Measurements
1430mm x 105mm x 1040mm Weight 14.5kg
Events
Context (CMS Context)
The rock art of the Kimberley region of Australia's northwest incorporates two figure styles, Wandjina - squat ancestral spirits with a distinctive halo-style band of colour around the head - and Guion Guion, more varied, elongated anthropomorphic creatures. These have been renowned and controversial since their European discovery by Sir George Grey in 1837 (Wandjina) and the explorer Joseph Bradshaw in 1891 (Guion Guion, also known as Bradshaws) after him. It has been claimed from time to time that design aspects and/or the graphic sophistication of the rock paintings indicated some immigrant, non-Aboriginal influence; these claims are not considered sustainable by contemporary scholars, but reflect the wider issues at stake in the study and interpretation of rock art and the judgements about cultural value, race, etc. that have entered into observations of specific genres.
From the mid-1970s members of the Karadada family began producing art work related to these traditions. The two sets of prints offered by APW beautifully exemplify this practice. The large Lily Karadada print featuring the two Wandjina is magnificent and technically outstanding in its printmaking craft. We have previously acquired one of Regina Karadada's Guion Guion works but consider that the suite justifies fuller representation. We would plan to rotate them within the Museum's future permanent world archaeology gallery, exemplifying the life that a major archaeological tradition leads in the contemporary indigenous imagination and art.
Event Date 13/8/2013
Author: Remke van der Velden
Context (CMS Context)
Drawn on the plate by Karadada (c.1921-) in Kalumburu and printed in an edition of 15 plus proofs, by APW Senior Printer Martin King at APW, Melbourne, 2009.
Event Date 13/8/2013
Author: Remke van der Velden
Context (CMS Context)
Presented by The Art Fund and the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation. An acquisition project to build a collection of modern and contemporary work on paper from Australia, Canada and South Africa was undertaken over 2011-13 with the support of a grant under The Art Fund's RENEW programme. The collection was developed with the expert advice and generous assistance of Annie Coombes and Norman Vorano in relation to South African and Inuit artists respectively. Khadija Carroll, Anita Herle and Diana Wood Conroy also contributed to the selection process. Obtained from Australian Print Workshop, 210 Gertrude Street, Fitzroy, Victoria, 3065, Australia. Acquired on 30 July 2013. Arrived on 8/8/2013.
Event Date 13/8/2013
Author: maa
Description (CMS Description)
Etching by Lily Karadada, titled 'Wandjina and Bush Turkeys', 2009. Presentation Proof. Etching printed in three colours, from two copper plates. Condition: Good.
Event Date 13/8/2013
Author: maa
Context (CMS Context)
Exhibited: The Power of Paper, Li Ka Shing Gallery, MAA, 14 February - 6 December 2015. Reproduced in the exhibition catalogue.
Event Date 20/2/2015
Author: Eleanor Wilkinson
Loan (Exhibition)
Vice Cancellor's Lodge, 1/12/2020 to 1/12/2021, Dining Room, Vice Cancellor's Lodge
Event Date 1/12/2020
Author: rachel hand
FM:267263
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