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12 December 2024
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Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
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Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
close
Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
close
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Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Australian, 1947–2019
Parwalla
,
2001
Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
close
Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
close
Elizabeth Nyumi Nungarrayi
Parwalla
, 2001
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Acrylic on canvas
Size
150 x 75 cm. (59.1 x 29.5 in.)
Markings
A photo certificate accompanies this work.
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
SmithDavidson Gallery
Amsterdam / Miami
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About this Artwork
Provenance
Warlayirti Artists, Balgo Hills
Raft Artspace, Darwin
The Collection of Colin and Elizabeth Laverty, Sydney, purchased in September 2001
Private collection, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Exhibitions
09/08/2022–09/20/2022 Australian Indigenous Art from the SmithDavidson Gallery
Papunya 50 Years | 1971 - 2021
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Description
This work exemplifies the physical and spiritual connection of the artist to her country, in a symbiotic relationship that informs the entirety of Nyumi’s artistic output. Parwalla is the country where Nyumi lived as a child with her mother, before losing her in a tragic accident. After this, Nyumi led a nomadic existence with her family group, ultimately settling in the Wirrimanu community at Balgo, where she commenced painting in 1987 for the Warlayirti Artists cooperative. The symbols depicted in Nyumi’s works are inherently feminine. She represents campsites, bush tucker, native flora and fauna and women’s food-gathering implements. These themes are rendered in a delicate, jewel-like style and soft palette of pastel yellows, oranges, pinks and creams, removed from the vigorous, painterly style and bright colors idiosyncratic to Balgo. Perkins highlights the influence of Nyumi’s matrilineal Pintupi heritage, and associates her with that extraordinary generation of desert women artists, beginning in the 1980s with Emily Kame Kngwarreye, followed by Pintupi artists at Kintore and Kiwirrkurra and spectacularly reinvented by the women artists at Warlayirti.
Please noted that all Aboriginal Art is created from a so called ‘Birds Eye’ view. This means that the paintings can be hung either horizontally as well as vertically.
SmithDavidson Gallery represents a wide range of Australian Aboriginal Art, please contact for additional information.
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