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  • All Artwork
    • Arnhem Land Artwork
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AUD $ 7,000.00 Cart

Kuddtji Tjungarrayi

Dob:          1930 
Place: Alhalkere Utopia
Station Area: Utopia, Boundary Bore NE of Alice Springs,
Language: Eastern Anmatyerre
Tribe: Utopia
Medium: Acrylic paint on canvas

Kuddtji, born around 1928, is one of Australia’s leading Aboriginal artists who began painting in the early eighties after the art movement at Papunya was inspired by ” Geoffrey Bardon. He is custodian of his country situated approximately 230 kms north east of Alice Springs. He is the brother of renowned artist Emily Kame Kngwarreye from Utopia. Prior to his artistic career he had numerous jobs through out the Central Desert as a stockman and also worked in minera1 and gold mines. He has been represented in major international exhibitions and has gained world wide recognition for his traditional depictions of his dreamings

Dreamings, telling of the travels and law of the Emu ancestors. Starting in 1986, his precisely dotted Emu Dreaming paintings, featuring ranks of coloured roundels and other ‘hieroglyphs’ on a chequered or dotted background, became sought after by major galleries in the Northern Territory. Breaking out of this style after some years, Kudditji’s work became far looser and more ‘abstract’, and some commentators have seen a strong similarity with his sister Emily’s work – but it is not clear who was the first to set out on this path. The demand for his earlier, detailed style, however, moved Kudditji to return to it, and it was only in 2003 that he began to exhibit the extraordinary, saturated colour paintings that have seen his reputation grow nationally and internationally.

The new paintings, in fact, have several styles, and Kudditji has explored size of canvas as well as form in these intense, beautiful works. A sense of immense space can be felt in the “My Country” paintings, where massive blocks of stippled colour are laid alongside each other, sometimes using only two colours, while in other paintings a quilt of juxtaposed colours produces a landscape effect.

Geoffrey Bardon, speaking of Papunya artists, writes that they “dreamed [their] marvellous spirit-place back” so that “the land became a great song of the place where a spirit could be in its own supernatural grace; the ‘My Country’ (Homeland) Dreamings were the painters’ affirmation of both themselves and their ancestors” (Papunya, p.54). Clearly, the same can be said of Kudditji Kngwarreye.

Click here to view the Exhibitions and collections

Group Exhibitions:


2003 New Paintings, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne
2004: My Country, Japingka Gallery Perth
2004: My Country, New Paintings, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne
2004: Waterhole Aboriginal Art, Sofitel Wentworth Hotel Exhibition, Sydney.
2005: Colours in Country, Art Mob, Hobart, Tasmania
2005: New Paintings, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne
2005: Waterhole Aboriginal Art, Danks Street, Sydney.

Artworks

11022295

Kuddtji Tjungarrayi
My Country

C/No: 11022295 90cm x 152cm Acrylic on Linen
AUD $ 7,000.00
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KUD2011-WW02

Kuddtji Tjungarrayi
My Country

C/No: KUD2011-WW02 181cm x 250cm Acrylic on Linen
Call for Price
4918

Kuddtji Tjungarrayi
My Country

C/No: 4918 90cm x 119cm Acrylic on Linen
AUD $ 5,500.00
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We are also a signatory to the Indigenous Australian Art Commercial Code of Conduct, which was recently introduced to promote fair and transparent dealings within the Industry.

Aboriginal Fine Arts Gallery is a founding member of the Australian Indigenous Art Trade Association, which was established to promote the ethical trade of indigenous art. 

Contact Us

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  • +61 8981 1315
  • 11 Knuckey St, Darwin City NT 0800
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