Peter Marralwanga was a famed artist, known for his bark paintings representing the Djang, the spirits of his ancestors. In Peter Marralwanga: Painter of the Djang of Western Arnhem Land, LUKE TAYLOR and IVAN NAMIRRKKI explore his life, legacy and incredible impact on Australian art.
Read on for an extract.
ABOUT THE BOOK

This book tracks Marralwanga’s life of learning about country and conveys the religious meaning of numerous major works, offering outsiders a richer understanding and appreciation of Arnhem Land art. It also shows the crucial role of individuals working for the community arts cooperative Maningrida Arts and Culture in facilitating Maralwanga’s rise to recognition as a major Australian and world artist.
Extensively illustrated, Peter Marralwanga: Painter of the Djang of Western Arnhem Land, is a study of unique knowledge and beauty.
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EXTRACT
INTRO
Famed Aboriginal Artist Peter Marralwanga was born and raised in West Arnhem Land. Under the guidance of legendary bark painted Yirawala, Marralwanga developed his own unique style of painting on both bark and paper. Inspired by the ceremonial knowledge of the Bininj people, he was given special permission to create ceremonial images. He was responsible for painting his people’s ancestral spirits, known as the Djang, and developed a unique style of representing both plant, person, spirit and animal. He had two solo gallery showings during his life.
Painter of the Djang of Western Arnem Land is a gallery book of Marralwanga’s most famous works and places them in their religious and ceremonial contexts. With insight from the artist himself, and his son Ivan Namirrki,, this work tracks Marralawanga’s life and experiences of learning about country and ceremony.
EXTRACT
The innovation in Marralwanga’s work was the result of his determination to show that the figures in his paintings were not simply animals. Respect for the skills exhibited by Aboriginal hunters had been shown in the past; likewise, for their virtuosity in the delineation of animal species in paintings. Unsurprisingly, western Arnhem Land bark paintings that showed a hunter spearing a kangaroo developed an iconic status for collectors. Yet, in so‑called ‘primitive’ art markets, there was little appreciation that such imagery also had deep ceremonial reverberations for the artists who understood the subject matter as Djang and who were referencing creation events. For example, the motif of the spearing of kangaroo beings recurs in Kuninjku ceremonies such as Lorrkkon and Wubarr. By fusing elements of ceremonial painting with his figurative works, Marralwanga drew attention to this more profound interpretation. His extensive repertoire of Djang subjects reveals Ancestral creativity across the region. Seen through his eyes, this Country sparkles with everlasting powers. This was his inspiration for re-establishing a settlement at Marrkolidjban and his continual stream of bark paintings. As a responsible ceremonial leader, he maintained and promulgated this valuable, and otherwise unseen, knowledge of the Ancestral realm.

Marralwanga’s children were also encouraged to care for their Country and become leaders. Ivan Namirrkki has expressed in fond terms his duty to emulate his father. He has also described his exasperation at currently unsupportive governmental policies. Nevertheless, Ivan, and Marralwanga’s other children, were inspired to become painters of note. Each came to elaborate the way they painted the clan stories and, these days, more geometric forms are preferred. The changes they introduced developed from their strong knowledge of the stories for Country and the multiple formats of ceremonial painting. Marralwanga was a cultural wellspring for developing the foundations of their own creativity.

For Marralwanga, these were stories embedded in Country. His cultural message is that the original heroes of these stories are Djang. His paintings comprise human strivings to indicate their original powers. This was the core meaning he wished to convey. His creativity bespeaks the productivity of a lifetime of learning, not just about Country, but also about different cultural ways of bringing Country to life in paint and in song. He was adept at wielding these material expressions to relay the beneficent power of the Ancestral world.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Read more about Namirrkki’s work here.
Luke Taylor is an anthropologist who has worked in western Arnhem Land since 1981, mainly with the Aboriginal artists of the region, including Peter Marralwanga. Luke was a Senior Curator at the National Museum of Australia (1991–2000) and Director of Research and then Deputy Principal of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (2000–2013). He has published widely on Aboriginal art and contributed to numerous exhibitions of western Arnhem Land bark paintings.









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