Ningura Napurrula (born c.1938 – 2013) was a Pintupi-speaking Indigenous Australian artist from the Western Desert, whose work was internationally acclaimed. Her works included a site-specific commission for the ceiling of the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, as well as appearing on an Australian postage stamp.
Ningura Napurrula | |
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Born | c.1938 Waltuka, Kiwirrkurra |
Died | 11 November 2013 |
Notable work | Wirrulnga Sequence |
Movement | Papunya Tula Art |
Spouse | Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi |
Napurrula was born circa 1938 in Watulka, south of Kiwirrkurra in the East Gibson Desert, Western Australia.[1] Her first journey out of the desert was in 1962 with the Northern Territory Welfare Branch patrol, when her son needed medical treatment at Papunya.[2] She travelled with her son and her husband, Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi, back to Kiwirrkurra that year.[2] The following year Napurrula and her family group returned, this time as part of a migration of the Pintupi people due to drought.[2][3]
Napurrula died on 11 November 2013 from kidney disease.[2][4] Her sons Morris Gibson Tjapaltjarri (Mawitji) and Adam Gibbs Tjapaltjarri are painters, as well as her daughter Glenys Napaltjarri.[2][5]
It was through her husband, Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi's painting that Napurrula first began work as an artist, supporting the production of his work, alongside his two other wives.[2] Tjungurrayi was a founder of the Papunya Tula Artists and was a proponent of the Tingari style of painting, which was popular in Pintupi men's painting in the 1990s.[2] In the 1980s the family moved to live in Walungurru, a newly established settlement and it was here that Tjungurrayi's wives, including Napurrula, worked on his paintings.[2]
In 1995, Napurrula joined the Kintore/Haasts Bluff women's painting project, which was in its second year at that time.[6] It was there that she developed her signature style of diachrome patterns, with occasional use of colour.[6] She formally joined the Papunya Tula company in 1996.[5] Napurrula, along with other women artists, revitalised the company with their work, after the death of many of the male artists in the preceding years.[7]
After her husband's death in 1998, the volume of paintings she produced increased.[2] Her style is reminiscent of some of Tjungurrayi's work, but her subject - women's lives and experiences and their role in mythology – differs.[2][8] Comparisons have been drawn between her work and that of other Papunya Tula artists, such as Makinti Napanangka and Inyuwa Nampitjinpa.[2] Her status not just as an artist, but as a guardian of cultural heritage meant she was highly regarded in her community and beyond in her lifetime.[9] The palette she used and the way the paint is layered on the canvas is seen as reminiscent of how body paint is used by women in ceremonial activities.[10]
Early works examined a range of subjects, but later in her career much of Napurrula's work focussed on the rockhole site of Wirrulnga, which was closely associated with birth and women's lives.[11]
During her lifetime, Napurrula donated works to set-up and support the Western Desert Dialysis program.[4] The program made dialysis available to remote communities through a purple lorry, which travelled between them; Napurrula's work featured on one side of it.[4] At the end of her life she benefited from the treatment the program she had supported could provide.[4]
Napurrula's work was exhibited in several group shows in 1999 in Sydney, Melbourne and Darwin.[12] Her first solo exhibition was at William Mora Aboriginal Art in 2000.[1] In 2015 her work featured in a joint exhibition in Singapore, alongside the work of Nanyuma Napagati.[13] Her work has been exhibited in dozens of other exhibitions.[1]
In 2002, her work reached national prominence when it featured on an Australian postage stamp.[6]
Napurrula's work is highly collectable and in 2007 and 2008 she was voted one of Australia's most collectable artists by Australian Art Collector Magazine.[14] Her work is held by a number of significant galleries, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, where several works are part of the larger suite Tjukurrpa Palurukutu, Kutjupawana Palyantjanya – same stories, a new way.[15] Other collections include: National Gallery of Australia.[16]
In 2006 Napurrula with three other female and four male artists were commissioned by the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris to produce new works for its ceilings and roof.[6][12][17][18][19] She saw this as the pinnacle of her career.[9] Napurrual created a huge design on the first floor ceilings of the museum, based on the work Wirrulnga in the collection at the National Gallery of New South Wales.[20]
2002 - Highly Commended in the Alice Prize[21]
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