Indigenous Artist
Watercolour on paper. 2007. Portrait of an Indigenous artist, Papunya, ca. 1970 from a photograph by Michael Jenson. source: National Library of Australia
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Papunya (23°13′S, 131°54′E), is a small Indigenous Australian community of about 350 people roughly 240 km northwest of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory, Australia. It is now home to a number of displaced Aboriginal people mainly from the Pintubi and Luritja tribes.
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Pintupi and Luritja people were forced off their traditional country in the 1930s and moved into Hermannsburg and Haast’s Bluff where there were government ration depots. There were often tragic confrontations between these people, with their nomadic hunter-gathering lifestyle, and the cattlemen who were moving into the country and over-using the limited water supplies of the region for their cattle.
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The Australian government built a water bore and some basic housing at Papunya in the 1950s to provide room for the increasing populations of people in the already-established Aboriginal communities and reserves. The community grew to over a thousand people in the early 1970s and was plagued by poor living conditions, health problems,[such as flu, the disease of the white man which the aboriginals’ bodies found hard to fight off] and tensions between various tribal and linguistic groups. These festering problems led many people, especially the Pintupi, to move further west closer to their traditional country. After settling in a series of outstations, with little or no support from the government, the new community of Kintore was established about 250 km west of Papunya in the early 1980s.
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It was during the 1970s that a striking and unique blend of ancient and modern art styles began to emerge in Papunya and by the 1980s had begun to attract national and then international attention, now commanding a proud place on world art markets. source: www.wikepedia.org
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LittleHelen
Brilliant!
Helene Kippert
Beautiful work Lee!
Matt Mawson
A strong image, Lee. It looks like you’ve applied the white paint in the same manner as real-life ceremonial face painting.
Lee Wilde
Thank you girls :-)
Yes, it does look like that now that you mention it, Matt. I hadn’t thought about that before. I was trying to create a sense of someone standing in a strong light…a spotlight perhaps….illuminating all the wonderful details of his face…and yet there is still so much unseen and unknown about him.
mgadise
this is cool, love the light treatment in this painting
Dee Boylan
Wow Lee…this is amazing…Iv’e seen you around the forums and only now checked out your work…I’m very glad i did!
Shauna Noble
A wonderful painting such depth of feeling
Lee Wilde
Thank you everyone. Yes, I have to say that this painting and the portrait of Bon Scott are my favourites at the present time.
SD Smart
Your portraits are beautiful. Thank you for sharing them.
GittiArt
Hi Lee , this is an outstanding portrait indeed ! I love its monochrome look and thr great play with light and shadow !!! TOP NOTCH !!!
shanghaiwu
this is wonderful
cdwork
Superb work
Pete Chennell
excellant piece
Bernadette Burke
i know its more of the same, but this is GREAT! Also i’m extra impressed that this is in watercolour, as at first glance i thought it was oils. :)
Claudia Hansen
WOW… Excellent artwork!!!
Lutz Baar
Strong! Good one!
Serge Ah-Wong
Strong work, you got great gallery
Mick Kupresanin
WOW Lee…thought it was an oil…very strong painting