Pwoja-Pukumani body design #1 and #2
Pwoja-Pukumani body design #1 and #2
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Freda Warlapini

1928 - 2003 Pwoja-Pukumani body design #1 and #2 (unknown)
  • colour lithograph printed from 2 aluminium plates
43 cm x 62 cm
Description

Freda Warlapinni began painting in her 70s and quickly became a leading figure among the older generation of Tiwi artists. Her work is often titled Pwoja, a Tiwi term that refers to the designs painted on the bodies of dancers for ceremonial performance.

Although Tiwi art is marked by strikingly consistent formal parameters, individual inflection remains highly regarded.

Warlapinni's often starkly applied networks of ochre lines (referred to in Tiwi as mulypinyini) provide something of a signature in her work. Retaining the looseness of execution that many younger Tiwi artists associate with an older style of painting, she managed to express a surprising repertoire within this reductive visual language.

Alongside the work of her friend Kitty Kantilla, Warlapinni's distinctive aethetic approach to traditional desgins helped Tiwi art become recognised within the broader field of Indigenous art in Australia. She played a strong mentorship role at Jilamara Arts & Crafts Association in Milikapiti, initially guiding a younger generation of artists, including Timothy Cook, as they began to establish their own artistic practices.

© Jilamara Arts & Crafts Association, Melville Island, NT

 

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The Wesfarmers Collection of Australian Art acknowledges all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Traditional Custodians of Country and recognises their continuing connection to land, sea, culture and community. We pay our respects to Elders past and present.

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