Organized by the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection

Nyapanyapa Yunupiŋu | Stars

Nyapanyapa Yunupiŋu

Stars, 2018

Ganyu'

Clan

Gumatj

Songline

Djulpan | The Seven Sisters

"I learned this on my own. My father taught me. He said: "Daughter see this, you will do this in the future." "I will see your hands now. You will do it, and I will watch, Father." That’s what I said. My father gave me, these paintings, the white ones, the red ones with black I paint. I make them black and also red. I’ve done a very good job. "

– NYAPANYAPA YUNUPIŊU

More Info

A woman of great humility, Nyapanyapa Yunupingu rose to become one of Australia’s most acclaimed contemporary artists. Hailing from a powerful Yolngu family, Nyapanyapa was the daughter of the statesman and artist Mungurruway Yunupingu, and the younger sister of artist Gulumbu Yunupingu.

Nyapanyapa's work represented a radical shift in Yolngu art history. In 2008, she began to incorporate biographical elements into her paintings, before abandoning figuration altogether. In 2009, she began referring to her works as mayilimiriw—a Yolngu word that translates as “meaningless.” This put her practice in stark contrast to previous generations of Yolngu artists, for whom every mark was intended to invoke the presence of ancestral spirits.

For Maḏayin, at the request of curator Djambawa Marawili, Nyapanyapa returned to the theme of ganyu' (stars) which relate to the Seven Sisters or Pleiades star cluster. According to Nyapanyapa:

Our father Munggurrawuy painted the story of Djulpan. This story is about seven sisters who went out in their canoe called Djulpan. During certain seasons they used to go hunting for food and always come back with different types of food. As you can see they would come back with turtle, fish ,freshwater snakes and also bush foods like yams and berries. They can now be seen in the sky of a night , seven stars that come out together like they are shown on the painting.

The stars come in season when the food and berries come out, the stars w ill travel through the sky during that month until the season is over and they don’t come out until the next season. They are the constellation called Plaiedes and they are being chased by three brothers (Orion). They sail over the Northern horizon and when they get home they light their fires.


– Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka

Additional Information

Decade

2018

Medium

Natural pigments on eucalyptus bark

Dimensions (IN)

74 13/32 x 32 11/16

Dimensions (CM)

189 x 83

Credit

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia.
The 2017-19 Kluge-Ruhe Maḏayin Commission. Purchased with funds provided by Bérengère Primat/Fondation Opale, 2019.
2019.0017.003

Narrative

Gumatj

The Gumatj are a large clan, with homeland communities at Gunyuŋarra, Birany’birany, Dhanaya, Bawaka, Maṯamaṯa...

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Songline

Djulpan | The Seven Sisters

The Djulpan, the Seven Sisters, are one of the first creations. They are an important...

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Location

2010s

The 2010s saw Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka go from strength to strength. At the National Aboriginal and...

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About The Artist(s)

Clan

Gumatj

Artist Dates

c.1945-2021

Nyapanyapa Yunupiŋu

Nyapanyapa Yunupiŋu was one of Australia’s most acclaimed contemporary artists. She rose to prominence for her paintings that departed from sacred elements characteristic of Yolŋu art. Hailing from a powerful Yolŋu family, Nyapanyapa is the daughter of the statesman and artist Mungurruway Yunupiŋu and is the younger sister of artist Gulumbu Yunupiŋu. Her works are held in every major public collection in Australia. In 2016 she was featured in the Sydney Biennale, and the Bangarra Dance Theatre performed a work inspired by her life. In 2020, the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory in Darwin held a retrospective of her work, and in 2021, she was awarded the Wynne Prize, one of Australia’s most prestigious landscape painting prizes.

Collections Represented

Art Gallery of New South Wales

Art Gallery of Western Australia

Auckland Art Gallery Toi O Tamaki

Charles Darwin University Collection

Fondation Opale, Lens, Switzerland

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia

Monash University Art Collection

Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory

Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa

National Gallery of Australia

National Gallery of Victoria

Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art