Icons of the desert : early Aboriginal paintings from Papunya

by Roger Benjamin (Editor)

Other authorsMichael Jensen (Photographer), Vivien Johnson (Contributor), Hetti Perkins, Andrew Weislogel (Editor), R. G. Kimber (Contributor), Fred Meyers (Contributor)
Hardcover, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

759.9940899915

Publication

Ithaca, N.Y. : Distributed by Cornell University, c2009. (176 p. : col. ill., col. map, bibliography, 29 cm. + 1 suppl. [13 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm.]).

Description

Icons of the Desert is an exhibition catalog produced by the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University for a show featuring forty-nine "dot-paintings" produced by Aboriginal artists from the settlement of Panpunya. Dot-painting has become an art instantly associated with Aboriginal Australia. In the more than thirty-five years since the advent of this movement, Papunya works have been widely exhibited and acquired by private collectors and museums in Australia, and increasingly abroad. Icons of the Desert is the first book to focus on the founding expressions of Papunya art. It examines their origins in the paintings produced in Papunya in the Western Desert during the years 1971 to 1973, after the Sydney schoolteacher Geoffrey Bardon provided Aboriginal men with art materials and encouraged them to paint on Masonite, against the wishes of Australian government officials. These paintings claim a unique status. Only around six hundred were made. They are also the first painted works to transfer the designs of desert ceremonial imagery to a permanent surface. Beyond this rarity and historical significance, however, the visual qualities of Papunya boards make them a uniquely appealing body of work. They have the freshness of trial and error, of experiment by artists who were seasoned in other media adjusting to an unfamiliar format. Illustrated with full-color plates of the forty-nine exhibited works by such great artists as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Johnny Warangkula Tjupurrula, and Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri, Icons of the Desert features numerous color figures of comparative works and documentary photographs of the original artists at work, some never before published, and a chronological catalog documenting the works' history and iconography, edited by project curator Roger Benjamin. The leading Indigenous curator in the field, Hetti Perkins, contributed the preface. Roger Benjamin authored the lead essay, which situates the works in their historical and cultural context. Fred Myers, an internationally renowned cultural anthropologist who undertook his doctoral research at Papunya when the movement was still in formation, has written an essay on the stylistic development of one of the painting men he knew personally, Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi. Vivien Johnson, the most prominent Australian author on Western and Central Desert art, writes on a second important artist in the collection, Charlie Tarawa Tjungurrayi. In addition, the memories of relatives of deceased painters in the exhibition are presented in the form of an interview conducted by Dick Kimber, who was a schoolteacher at Papunya in 1971 when the paintings were first produced.… (more)

Language

Physical description

176 p.; 29 cm

ISBN

1934260061 / 9781934260067

Local notes

The exhibition had three venues in the USA:
1. Ithaca, New York, USA: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art. Cornell University: 2009-01-10 to 2009-04-05;
2. Los Angeles, California, USA: Fowler Museum of Cultural History: 2009-05-03 to 2009-08-02;
3. New York, New York, USA: Grey Art Gallery. New York University: 2009-09-01 to 2009-12-05.
Contents:
a. Collectors' foreword / John and Barbara Wilkerson;
b. Acknowledgments / Andrew C. Weislogel
c. Preface / Hetti Perkins
d. The men's painting room at Papunya : photographs by Michael Jensen
e. The fetish for Papunya boards / Roger Benjamin
f. Graceful transfigurations of person, place, and story: the stylistic evolution of Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi / Fred Myers
g. The intelligence of Pintupi painting / Vivien Johnson
h. Relatives of the artists response to the paintings / R.G. Kimber
i. Catalogue of the exhibition / Roger Benjamin.

T.p. verso. "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are respectfully advised that this booklet includes secret/sacred imagery which may be harmful to uninitiated members of their communities."--Suppl. cover.
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