Australia
Aboriginal Art Prints

Home
www.aboriginalartprints.com.au
Power Search
Search Our Database Of Aboriginal Art
Browse Aboriginal Art Prints By:
Browse our Aboriginal Art
Aboriginal Artist
List Our Aboriginal Art By Artist
Regions
List Our Aboriginal Art By Regions
Title
List Our Aboriginal Art By Title
New Prints
New Aboriginal Art Prints
Secondary Market Prints
Aboriginal Art Prints From The Archive
History of Aboriginal Printmaking
History of Aboriginal Print Making
Aboriginal Artists' Biographies
History of Aboriginal Print Making
Currency Converter

Glossary
Glossary of Print Making Terms
Links

Site Map
Links to Other Aboriginal Art & Culture Sites

Aboriginal Art
Home www.aboriginalartprints.com.au | Browse browse our aboriginal art | Cart Have A Look Inside Your Shopping Cart | About Us about us | Contact Us Contact Us | Help Help
Artist Biography

Aboriginal Artists from Maningriga -

Johnny Bulunbulun

see the Artists prints

Browse Maningrida Prints




Johnny Bulunbulun was born just after the Second World War near the Arafura Swamp of Central Arnhem Land. When he was older, his family moved to the nearby Christian mission in Milingimbi so that he could attend school. He left school early to work in a variety of labouring jobs on the mission, at the ‘government’ settlement at Maningrida, and with the Armed Services in Darwin. Johnny is a senior member of the Ganalbingu group and is one of the most important singers and ceremonial men in north-central Arnhem Land.

Although from the Arafura Swamp he moved west to Gamedi outstation on the Blyth River when he married Nelly [deceased] the sister of painter Jack Wununwun [deceased]. A steady though not prolific painter he began to make his mark in the late 1970’s when the Aboriginal art market expanded and the Art & Craft Centre artists cooperative at Maningrida began to be noticed. His career took an interesting turn in 1977 after he was commissioned to complete an individual mural on the wall and ceiling of an underground Australian Defence Department instillation in Canberra. In 1981 his importance was recognised by a one artist show at the Hogarth Gallery in Sydney. In 1986 he attended the South Pacific Arts Festival in Tahiti.

His major composition is often the totem of Gumang, the magpie goose and Guwaynang, the long necked turtle focused around a central sacred waterhole. The Guwaynang is an important creature in Ganalbingu cosmology and is Bulunbulun’s personal totem. According to Bulunbulun, the magpie goose “is the most important one because it was him that made my country and my people”.


subjects and themes

Common subjects are Gurnang, the magpie goose, and Garjarr, the water snake amongst waterlilies in the swamp country at Djilibunyurnurr. The Dreaming figure Yangagai looks after his country. Other figures associated with these lands are Wamyu, the flying fox, Gunungurr, the blackheaded python, Barrnda, the freshwater tortoise, Diljidamba, a brown water beetle eaten by the tortoises and Lidgilidgi, finches. These finches and magpie geese are danced by the Ganalbingu people at Marradjirri (ceremony to celebrate the birth of a child), Djapi (initiation) and Murukundjeh (mortuary) ceremonies.


collections

Artbank, Sydney.

Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney.

Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.

Central Collection, Australian National University, Canberra.

Djomi Museum, Maningrida, NT.

Edith Cowan University Collection Perth WA Flinders University Art Museum, Adelaide.

Kluge Foundation, Morven Estate, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.

Milingimbi Collection, MECA, Milingimbi Educational and Cultural Association, NT.

Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.

Museum of Contemporary Art, Maningrida Collection, Sydney.

National Gallery of Australia, Canberra.

National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.

National Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Sydney.

Parliament House Art Collection, Canberra.

The Holmes a Court Collection, Perth.

The Kelton Foundation, Santa Monica, U.S.A.


exhibitions

Individual exhibitions

1981 Hogarth Galleries, Sydney.


Group exhibitions

1983 Artists of Arnhem Land, Canberra School of Arts.

1984 Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne.

1985, South Pacific Festival of Arts, Townsville.

1986 Ramingining Art Exhibition, Araluen Arts Centre, Alice Springs, NT.

1986 The Art of the First Australians, Kobe City Museum, Japan.

1986 My Country, My Story, My Painting : Recent Paintings by Twelve Arnhem Land Artists, National Gallery of Australia exhibition at the Drill Hall Gallery, Canberra.

1987 Hogarth Galleries, Sydney.

1988 Australian Aboriginal Graphics from the Collection of the Flinders University Art Museum.

1989 Aboriginal Art: The Continuing Tradition, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra.

1990 Balance 1990: views, visions, influences, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane.

1990 Keepers of the Secrets, Aboriginal Art from Arnhem land, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.

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.

1992 Crossroads-Towards a New Reality, Aboriginal Art from Australia, National Museums of Modern Art, Kyoto and Tokyo.

1993/4 ARATJARA, Art of the First Australians, Touring: Kunstammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf; Hayward Gallery, London; Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark.

1994 Maningrida Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney.

1995 Perspecta Art Gallery of NSW Sydney NSW.

1996 Copyrites: Aboriginal Art in the Age of Reproductive Technology.

1996 Maningrida Exhibition Raintree Fine Art Gallery, Darwin NT.

1996 The Language of Place Framed Gallery, Darwin, NT.

1996 Australian Heritage Art Awards Exhibition Canberra, ACT.

1997 Juxtapositions: An exhibition of Australian Indigenous works Flinders University Art Museum, Adelaide SA.

1997 Mawurndjul & Bulunbulun Annandale Galleries, Sydney NSW.

1997 Shell Fremantle Print Award Femantle, WA.

1998 ACAF6 Exhibition Building Melbourne.

1999 Fighting for Culture Indigenart, Perth, WA.

1999 Bodypaint show, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne, Vic.

1999 16th NATSI Art Award Museum & Art Galleries of NT Darwin.

1999 Art & Place: Collecting Contemporary Art at Northern Territory University, Northern Territory University Gallery, Darwin, NT.


bibliography

Butler, R., 1986, ‘From dreamtime to machine time,’ Imprint 21(3-4), 9. (C)

Caruana, W., 1987, Australian Aboriginal Art, a Souvenir Book of Aboriginal Art in the Australian National Gallery, Australian National Gallery, Parkes, Australian Capital Territory. (C)

Caruana, W. (ed.), 1989, Windows on the Dreaming, Ellsyd Press, Sydney. (C)

Caruana, W., 1993, Aboriginal Art, Thames and Hudson, London. (C)

Hughes,A: ‘The Art of John Mawurndjal and John Bulunbulun: Introduction in Mawurndjal and Bulun Bulun Exhibition catalogue, Annandale Galleries, Sydney, 1997

Isaacs, J., 1984, Australia’s Living Heritage, Arts of the Dreaming, Lansdowne Press, Sydney. (C)

Isaacs, J., 1989, Australian Aboriginal Paintings, Weldon Publishing, New South Wales.

Langton, M., 1992-93 ‘The two women looked back over their shoulders & lamented leaving their country: detached comment (recent urban) & symbolic narrative (traditional),’ Aboriginal Art in the Public Eye, Art Monthly Australia Supplement, 7-9. (C)

Magin P; ‘John Bulunbulun: I water my trees and I paint’ in Mawurndjul and Bulunbulun exhibition catalogue, Annandale Galleries, Sydney 1997 Morphy H. Aboriginal Art, Phaidon Press 1998.

McCulloch S, Contemporary Aboriginal Art: A Guide to the Rebirth of an Ancient Culture. Allen & Unwin 1999.

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)

NT News, 27/12/1993, p. 6.

O’Ferrall, M., 1990, Keepers of the Secrets, Aboriginal Art from Arnhem land in the Collection of the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth. (C)

Reser, J., 1977, ‘Djakaldjirrparr: explanation of a mural painted by Johnny Bulun Bulun as told to Joseph Reser,’ Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Newsletter 8, 79-83.

Reser, J., 1977, ‘The dwelling as motif in Aboriginal bark painting’. In Ucko, P. (ed.), Form in Indigenous Art, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra.

Tweedie, P. and Scollay, C., 1979, ‘Art of the Aboriginal,’ Panorama: the Journal of Ansett Airlines Australia 21 (2), 1,4. (C)

Tweedie, P., 1985, This My Country, A View of Arnhem Land, William Collins Pty Ltd, Sydney.



Aboriginal Art Prints Home



region
Central Arnhem Land

state
NT

community
Maningrida

born
1946

active
1975

language bloc
Yolngu

language
Ganalbingu

outstation
Wurdeja

art centre
Maningrida Arts and Culture

medium
Bark painting, ochres on bark, colour lithograph, bark coffin, carved and painted hollow log coffin, stringybark canoe. Gumung derrka, goose canoe, lithographic prints, carving, ochres on canvas, limited edition prints


DENNIS NONA CURRENT SOLO EXHIBITION


Sesserae: New Works by Dennis Nona

Dennis Nona's Sesserae

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.
Dennis Nona's Bronze Dugong

s p o t l i g h t
Browsing: Check out all of our prints one by one, or browse in particular methods to suit you.
Secondary Market: Our 'Secondary Market Range' comprises one, sometimes two prints from an edition that is no longer in general distribution. They are hard to come by, secondary market prints that sold out years, and in some cases, decades ago. Many are rare, eminently collectable works by some of the most senior and acclaimed Aboriginal artists. Click here to see limited edition prints from our secondary market range.
Power Search: Try out our Power Search to find that print that you are after. Very specific search criteria ensure an easy find.
Shopping Online: Find out why shopping with us is safe, secure and respectful of your privacy.
Helping You Shop Safe This web site supports SSL enabled SECURE transactions
www.aboriginalartprints.com.au is a foundation member of the
Australian Indigenous Art Trade Association.
Art Trade - Australian Indigenous Art Trade Association Member


Contact Us @   sales@aboriginalartprints.com.au   or Telephone   (+61) 2 9332-1722


© Australian Art Print Network
© AIATSIS & ATSIC from the Biographical database of Australian indigenous visual artists published by Discovery Media.