The
Origins of Australian Aborigine
Art & Artists
Australian
Indigenous art is the oldest ongoing
tradition of art in the world. Initial
forms of artistic Aboriginal expression
were rock carvings, body painting
and ground designs, which date back
more than 30,000 years.
The quality and variety of Australian
Indigenous art produced today reflects
the richness and diversity of Indigenous
culture and the distinct differences
between tribes, languages, dialects
and geographic landscapes. Art has
always been an important part of
Aboriginal life, connecting past
and present, the people and the
land, and the supernatural and reality.
Indigenous art ranges across a wide
variety of mediums from works on
paper and canvas to fibre and glass.
Introduced media such as printmaking,
fabric printing, ceramics and glassware
now complement traditional arts
and crafts.
The story of the way these art forms
are produced runs parallel to the
history and experiences of the artists
themselves. It reflects customary
trading patterns, a struggle for
survival and the influence of governments
and churches.
A market in Indigenous artefacts
has existed between Indigenous and
non-Indigenous peoples since they
first came into contact. After colonisation,
artefact sales occurred on a widespread
basis throughout south-eastern Australia.
The prominence of Indigenous art
is due in part to the motivation
and considerable effort of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander artists,
particularly painters, who have
played a major role in introducing
both Australia and the rest of the
world to Australia's Indigenous
cultures. The Western Desert art
movement has come to be seen as
one of the most significant art
movements of the 20th century.
Rock art
The earliest Indigenous art was
paintings or engravings on boulders
or on the walls of rock shelters
and caves. Red ochre was being used
for painting at least 30,000 years
ago in central Australia. Indigenous
people relate these very old images
to the actions of Dreaming beings.
The images are sacred because they
show a continuing ancestral presence.
There are three broad styles of
rock art which reflect the regional
styles. The first is engraved geometric
figures such as circles, concentric
circles, arcs, animal tracks and
dots. These can be found in Central
Australia as well as Tasmania, the
Kimberleys and areas of Victoria.
The second is the simple figurative
style of painted or engraved silhouettes
of human and animal forms, which
are found in Queensland. The third
is complex figurative paintings
depict detailed figures, such as
x-ray art that shows internal organs
of humans and animals, which are
especially common to Arnhem Land
and surrounding areas.
Western Desert movement
and 'Papunya Tula'
While Aboriginal painting traditions
are many thousands of years old,
it was not until the 1970s that
Indigenous artists began to receive
widespread recognition in the West.
One of the first, and perhaps most
famous, group of Indigenous painters
was the Australian Western Desert
artists of Papunya Tula.
The styles of the Western Desert
were developed for painting on the
body or ground but once a local
schoolteacher, Geoffrey Bardon (1940-2003),
introduced paints and canvas to
the community, many locals began
adapting their styles to take advantage
of these new, Western mediums.
The result was a flourishing art
movement throughout the Western
Desert which saw individuals and
communities committing their intricate
and interesting stories and unique
iconography to canvas. This stimulated
an arts industry that now generates
around $200 million a year nationally.
Regional forms and styles
While the 'dot' style of painting
common in the Western Desert forms
the most widely recognised school
of Aboriginal painting, it is by
no means the only one. The National
Gallery of Australia's collection
includes bark paintings, weaving
and sculpture. The Gallery also
is proud of the large number of
works in its collection produced
by the Torres Strait Islanders,
who are known for their artistic
sculptures and headdresses.
The National Gallery of Australia
has in its collection what is arguably
one of the most powerful works of
art created in Australia. The Aboriginal
Memorial (1987 - 1988) is an installation
of 200 painted hollow log coffins
by the artists of Ramingining in
Arnhem Land. The Memorial, a collaborative
work involving 43 artists, is dedicated
to all Indigenous Australians who
lost their lives defending their
country since European settlement.
The first community art centre was
established at Ernabella in central
Australia in 1949. Pitantajtara
people were encouraged to produce
woollen rugs and greeting cards
using designs developed at the community
school. From 1971, Ernabella was
a centre for batik fabric art.
Contemporary Indigenous textile
production centres like Ernabella
Arts, Tiwi Design, Utopia Arts and
Keringke Arts have put Indigenous
fashion textiles on the international
stage.
Tasmanian artists produce shell
necklaces and basketry following
traditional styles, while other
artists are involved in photography,
ceramics, painting and printmaking.
Torres Strait Islander artists produce
ceremonial art, sculptures, engraved
items of material culture and weavings.
Albert Namatjira (1902 -
1959) - figurative landscapes
Albert Namatjira is one of Australia's
best-known Aboriginal artists, and
the first Aboriginal painter to
receive international recognition
for his art. A Western style painter,
he spent part of his youth at the
Hermannsburg Lutheran Mission, about
130 kilometres west of Alice Springs,
Northern Territory, and was introduced
to watercolour painting by a non-Aboriginal
artist, Rex Batterbee, in the 1930s.
Namatjira's landscape paintings
are predominantly of areas he knew
throughout his life in the tribal
land of Western Aranda, Central
Australia. His work gave rise to
the Hermannsburg School of landscape
painting.
His art captured the vibrant colours
of the Western MacDonnell and Krichauff
Ranges, the tributaries of Ellery
Creek and Hugh River, and in many
works the broad bed of the Finke
River that ran through the heart
of his tribal land.
In 1957 Namatjira was one of the
first Aborigines to be granted Australian
citizenship. Although he died aged
57 disenchanted with white society,
Namatjira did much to change the
prevailing negative view of Aborigines
at the time. He also paved the way
for the Papunya art movement, which
emerged a decade after his death.
Sales and markets
The practice of making artworks
allowed tribes people to pass on
knowledge about country and culture.
Sales provided economic support
for many Indigenous families forced
to live on government mission stations
in the Bass Strait, Victoria, New
South Wales and Queensland. This
is reflected today in the award-winning
organisations, the Koori Heritage
Trust in Victoria and Queensland
Indigenous Arts Marketing and Export
Agency (QIAMEA).
Today, Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander art has become internationally
accessible, recognised as fine art
as well as being utilitarian and
decorative, with the Western Desert
art movement recognised as one of
the most significant art movements
in twentieth century art. In 2004
there were about 96 art and craft
centres across Australia, in all
states and regions, encompassing
urban, rural and remote communities
which provide one of the main avenues
of support for Indigenous artists.
Indigenous art has embraced technology
and new media. Aboriginal Art Online
and Maningrida Arts & Culture
are two examples. There are also
many galleries and exhibitions of
Indigenous art on the Internet,
which have enhanced the international
popularity and awareness of Aboriginal
and Torres Trait Islander art.