Price Database
04 December 2024
Artists
Auctions
Artnet Auctions
Global Auction Houses
Galleries
Events
News
Price Database
Use the Artnet Price Database
Market Alerts
Artnet Analytics
Hidden
Buy
Browse Artists
Artnet Auctions
Browse Galleries
Global Auction Houses
Events & Exhibitions
Speak With a Specialist
Art Financing
How to Buy
Sell
Sell With Us
Become a Gallery Partner
Become an Auction Partner
Receive a Valuation
How to Sell
Search
Hidden
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
My Country
, 1994
90 x 84 cm. (35.4 x 33.1 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
Australian, 1910–1996
My Country
,
1994
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
My Country
, 1994
90 x 84 cm. (35.4 x 33.1 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Acrylic on canvas
Size
90 x 84 cm. (35.4 x 33.1 in.)
Markings
Bears inscription verso:
AGOD #5405 Aboriginal Gallery of Dreaming
This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Aboriginal Gallery of Dreaming
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
SmithDavidson Gallery
Amsterdam / Miami
Artworks
Artists
Exhibitions
Contact Gallery
Sell a similar work with Artnet Auctions
About this Artwork
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist and family in Utopia in 1995
The Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, Melbourne, Australia
Private collection, The Netherlands
Exhibitions
09/08/2022–09/20/2022 Australian Indigenous Art from the SmithDavidson Gallery
04/23/2020–06/14/2020 Origins, Australian Aboriginal Art from the SmithDavidson collection
2020 Origins, Australian Aboriginal Art from the SmithDavidson collection, April 10 – May 30
2018, Expo Chicago, SmithDavidson Gallery, Chicago, USA
See more
Description
The characteristic dots and simple linear structures of batik-making, that dominated the surface in emily’s first few years of painting on canvas, gave way to large fields of dots throughout 1992-93. Dots floated, freely filling large canvases and veiling traceries of lines that are fully or partially obscured below the surface. Dots are an integral stylistic element in Emily’s work.
This universal human mark is a generic feature of all desert art, originating in ritual body painting and ground designs. Dots have become such an identifiable hallmark of contemporary desert art that works from the region is often simply referred to as ‘dot painting’. Whilst her work has influenced many of her contemporaries, few desert artists, either men or women, have used the dot mark as innovatively as Emily. Her dots range from fine to coarse, controlled to radical, and they sometimes appear as single dots while at other times as double or triple dots.
Large dots in some works join to form lines that move, evoking the rhythem of dancing, the dynamism of growth, and the life force of nature as wind-borne seeds that scatter across the land.
The changing seasons and night skies are sensed in the expansive an shifting tonalities of emily’s palette.
See more
Emily Kame Kngwarreye News
View all Emily Kame Kngwarreye News
→
Auctions
The First-Ever Auction of Contemporary Aboriginal Art in New York Soars Past Expectations to Bring in $2.8 Million
by Eileen Kinsella
Art World
Is Damien Hirst’s Latest Series a Ripoff of an Aboriginal Australian Artist? See the Works Side-by-Side
by Sarah Cascone
Art World
Art Industry News: Is the $450 Million 'Salvator Mundi' Sale Very, Very Bad News? + More Must-Read Stories
by Artnet News
Auctions
artnet Asks: Damian Hackett on the Expanding Aboriginal Art Market
by artnet Auction House Partnerships