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Aboriginal
artists from Maningrida -
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Aboriginal
artist England Banggala’s paintings and fine art prints reflect his important status within
the prodigious traditional ceremonial program in which he is involved.
His pictorial style combines elements of the west and central Arnhem
Land traditions. The organic forms he represents in his work often
depict the elements of Gunardba women travelling across the land,
creating sacred sites, law and language for the Gunardba people. These
elements now reside in spirit form at sites specific to the An-ngulin
clan.
A strong vigorous flow and graphic boldness is characterised in England Banggala’s paintings and limited edition prints . The cross hatching is found within the
figures and the schematic motifs of his work rather than in the background,
as is more common to the Aboriginal art of Arnhem Land. The broad areas of colour,
dotted subdivisions and plain background reflect England Banggala’s association
with the Rembarrnga. Rembarrnga Aboriginal art is not easily classifiable because
most artists of this group paint in distinctly individual and different
ways. The most likely reason for this divergence is geographical.
The Rembarrnga speaking people own land over a vast area of south-western
and south-central Arnhem Land, some of it inaccessible and therefore
isolated. This has caused each small group to develop their particular
traditions somewhat differently. The art of the group as a whole shares
common themes of water and stone country and spirit figures.
Banggala is a versatile artist who has also ventured successfully
into lithography and other forms of European printmaking. As printmaker
Theo Tremblay says of England Banggala: “He has an innate graphic ability,
a natural response and feeling for composition. A wholistic approach
where the background - a song, air, earth has as much to do with the
image as what flows in it.” England Bangala passed way in 2001.
subjects and themes
Ceremonial designs, designs associated with sites on clan lands, including
jin-gubardabiya pandanus skirt and related dilly bag and mermaid designs,
and ji-japum the snake creator being. Designs associated with the
clan waterhole, mermaids and mermaid sites, the banaka digging stick’,
birlimurra ‘leech’ and burichparr ‘weeping paperbark’ and lorrkon
‘hollow log coffin’. Other topics include the marrchila ‘estuarine
crocodile’, rajarra ‘barramundi’ and the wulakarra ‘conical fishtrap’.
collections
Aimee Proost Private collection, Qld.
Artbank, Sydney.
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney.
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide.
Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.
Central Collection, Australian National University, Canberra.
Christensen Collection, held Museum of Victoria, Melbourne.
David Betz Private collection, New York, USA, Djomi Museum, Maningrida.
Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Surfers Paradise, Queensland.
Kluge Foundation, Morven Estate, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.
Museum of Contemporary Art, Maningrida Collection, Sydney, NSW.
Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, VIC.
Myer Foundation, Melbourne, VIC.
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, ACT.
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, VIC.
The Holmes a Court Collection, Perth, WA.
Walonia Aboriginal Art. The Netherlands.
exhibitions
Group exhibitions
1974 to 1976 Art of Aboriginal Australia, touring Canada, Rothmans
of Pall Mall Canada Ltd.
1982 Aboriginal Art at the Top, Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern
Territory, Darwin.
1983 Artists of Arnhem Land, Canberra School of Arts.
1986 Painted Objects from Arnhem Land, University Drill Hall Gallery
(Pod), Canberra, ACT.
1987 The Fourth National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and
Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.
1987 Esplanade Gallery, Darwin.
1988 Bulawirri / Bugaja a special place, NGV, Melbourne.
1988 Gochan Jiny-jirra artists, MOCA, Brisbane.
1989 A Myriad of Dreaming: Twentieth Century Aboriginal Art, Westpac
Gallery, Melbourne; Design Warehouse Sydney [through Lauraine Diggins
Fine Art]
1989 Aboriginal Art: The Continuing Tradition, National Gallery of
Australia, Canberra.
1990 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia,
Adelaide.
1990 Balance 1990: views, visions, influences, travelling exhibition.
1990 Spirit in Land, Bark Paintings from Arnhem Land, National Gallery
of Victoria.
1990 Keepers of the Secrets, Aboriginal Art from Arnhem land, Art
Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.
1992 The Ninth National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and
Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.
1992/3 New Tracks Old Land: An Exhibition of Contemporary Prints from
Aboriginal Australia, touring USA and Australia.
1993 Ten years of acquisitions, from ANU collection, Drill Hall Gallery
ACT 1993, Australian Heritage Commission National Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Art Award Exhibition, Old Parliament House, Canberra.
1993/4 ARATJARA, Art of the First Australians, Touring: Kunstammlung
Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf; Hayward Gallery, London; Louisiana
Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark.
1994 Power of the Land, Masterpieces of Aboriginal Art, National Gallery
of Victoria.
1994 Maningrida Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney.
1995 In the time before morning: Aboriginal Art. Jim Davidson Collection
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Vic.
1996 Maningrida Exhibition Indigenart, Subiaco, WA
1996 Maningrida Exhibition Raintree Fine Art Gallery, Darwin NT.
1996 Men of High Degree. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Vic.
1997 Dreamings: Aboriginal Art from Australia The Netherlands.
1997 22nd Shell Fremantle Print Award Fremantle WA.
1998 ACAF6 Exhibitions Building. Melbourne.
1998 Paperbarks Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne, Vic.
1998 Spirits of the Dreaming Jarraman Arts Aboriginal Corporation
National Aboriginal Cultural Centre, Sydney NSW.
1998-9 A thousand Journeys Tin Sheds Gallery University of Sydney.
1999 16th NATSI Art Award Museum &Art Galleries of NT, Darwin.
1999 Fighting for Culture Indigenart, Perth, WA.
1999 Body paint show, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne Vic.
1999 16th NATSI Art Award Museum & Art Galleries of NT Darwin.
bibliography
Butler, R., 1986, ‘From dreamtime to machine time,’ Imprint 21(3-4),
10. (C)
Caruana, W. (ed.), 1989, Windows on the Dreaming, Ellsyd Press, Sydney.
(C)
Caruana, W., 1993, Aboriginal Art, Thames and Hudson, London. (C)
Diggins, L. (ed.), 1989, A Myriad of Dreaming: Twentieth Century Aboriginal
Art, exhib. cat., Malakoff Fine Art Press, North Caulfield, Victoria.
1993, Aratjara, Art of the First Australians: Traditional and Contemporary
Works by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Artists, exhib. cat.
(conceived and designed by Bernard Luthi in collaboration with Gary
Lee), Dumont, Buchverlag, Koln. (C)
McCulloch, A., & McCulloch, S., 1994, The Encyclopedia of Australian
Art, Allen & Unwin Pty Ltd, St Leonards, New South
Wales. McCulloch S, Contemporary Aboriginal Art: A Guide to the Rebirth
of an Ancient Culture Allen & Unwin 1999
Aboriginal Art Prints Home
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region
Central Arnhem Land
state
NT
community
Maningrida
born
1925 c
died
2001
active
1974
language
Burarra, Gun-nartpa dialect
outstation
Gochan Jiny-jirra (Cadell Gardens)
art centre
Maningrida Arts and Culture
medium
Bark painting, ochres on bark, carving, carved and painted wooden sculpture, hollow log coffin, lithography, limited edition prints
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DENNIS NONA CURRENT SOLO EXHIBITION

Sesserae: New Works by Dennis Nona


Paris, London, Sydney, Brisbane
Dennis Nona is widely acknowledged as one of, if not the most, important living Torres Strait Islander artist.
This exhibition of installations, limited edition linocuts, etchings and cast bronze sculptures showcases the artist's most recent work.
PARIS
The Australian Embassy
6 April - 8 June, 2006

LONDON
Rebecca Hossack Gallery
35 Windmill Street,
LONDON
(Dates TBA)

SYDNEY
31 Lamrock Avenue
BONDI BEACH, NSW
30 March - 16 April, 2006

BRISBANE
Dell Gallery, Queensland College of Art
BRISBANE, QLD
3 June - 10 July 2005

OTHER EXHIBITION VENUES
Other Australian and overseas venues and dates to be announced.


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