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Seed Dreaming
Artist: Agnes Nampijinpa Brown
46 x 46 cm
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- Artist:Agnes Nampijinpa Brown
- Title:Seed Dreaming
- ID:2918/14
- Medium:Acrylic on Canvas
- Size:46 x 46 cm
- Region:Yuendumu, Central Australia
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Seed Dreamingby Agnes Nampijinpa Brown
This painting tells the story of a Jangala 'Watiya-Warnu' ancestor who travelled south from a small hill called Ngurlpurranyangu to Yamunturrnga (Mount Leibig). As he travelled he picked the 'Watiya-Warnu' seeds and placed them in 'parrajas' (food carries), one of which he carried on his head. Watiya-Warnu is a seed bearing tree that grows in open spinifex on mulga country. When people returned to their camp after collecting the seed they would make large windbreaks for shelter and winnow the seed in the later afternoon. Immature 'Watiya-Warnu' seed is ground into a paste and can be used to treat upset stomachs. The associated 'Watiya-Warnu' ceremony involves the preparation of a large ground painting. This Jukurrpa belongs to Nampijinpa/Nangala women and Jampijinpa/Jangala men. In contemporary Warlpiri paintings traditional iconography is used to represent the Jukurrpa, particular sites and other elements. In paintings of this Dreaming 'U" shapes are often depicting women collecting the 'Watiya-Warnu' seeds. Oval shapes represent the 'parrajas' where they carry the seeds and strait lines beside them frequently portrait digging sticks.
- Artist:Agnes Nampijinpa Brown
- Title:Seed Dreaming
- ID:2918/14
- Medium:Acrylic on Canvas
- Size:46 x 46 cm
- Region:Yuendumu, Central Australia
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Artist
“I like painting the designs of my country, they are colourful and uplifting and they make me think about my Father. He used to tell me his stories when I was a little girl.” Agnes Nampijinpa Brown was born in 1973 in Nyirripi, a remote Aboriginal community approximately 450 km north-west of Alice Springs in the NT of Australia. She spends her time living between Nyirripi and Yuendumu, an Aboriginal community located 160 km south-east of Nyirripi. Both her parents are deceased. Agnes attended the Yuendumu School, finishing Year 12. She then returned to Nyirripi where she worked at the store. Agnes stopped working when she married. She has two daughters and one son. She is also a grandmother and has two grandkids, a boy and a girl. She now works for the Aged Care Program in Nyirripi. Agnes has been working with the Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation, an Aboriginal owned and governed art centre at Yuendumu, since 2007. She paints her father’s Jukurrpa stories, the Yankirri Jukurrpa (Emu Dreaming) and the Pamapardu Jukurrpa that relate directly to her father’s country around Mikanji, found west of Yuendumu and Walungurru south-west of Nyirripi. These stories have been passed down over the generations for Millennia. Agnes lives with her family and loves painting.
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