Organized by the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection

Noŋgirrŋa Marawili | Lightning and the Rock

Noŋgirrŋa Marawili

Lightning and the Rock, 2015

Guykthurr ga Guṉḏa

Clan

Maḏarrpa

Songline

Burrut’tji | Lightning Snakes

"This Yirritja painting I’m doing is coming from the heart and mind, but it’s not the sacred Maḏarrpa painting. It’s just an ordinary fire, not the Maḏarrpa fire. Tongues of fire. Fire burning backwards. This is just my thinking. No one told me to do this pattern. I did this on my own. When the elders see it they will let me know what they think."

– NOŊGIRRŊA MARAWILI

More Info

In mid-2012, Noŋgirrŋa Marawili began inserting cascading streams of diamonds into her paintings. The move coincided with her decision to start painting sites from her Maḏarrpa clan estates. Those familiar with Yolŋu art immediately associated these diamonds with the sacred miny’tji (clan designs) of the Maḏarrpa. But Noŋgirrŋa insisted that this was not the case. These were not sacred designs, she protested, but rather designs from her own heart and her own mind. As a senior woman, steeped in the protocols and proscriptions of Yolngu Law, Noŋgirrŋa did not want to be seen as infringing upon the rights of those who had a greater proprietary claim to paint them. And yet, once aware of the resemblance, it is almost impossible not to see an echo of these sacred Maḏarrpa patterns in works such as Guykthurr ga Guṉḏa | Lightning and the Rock.

In May 2015 I asked Djambawa Marawili—the leader of the Maḏarrpa clan—for his thoughts on the uncanny motifs in Noŋgirrŋa’s paintings. To illustrate his answer, he took me into the gallery at the Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Art Centre in Yirrkala. There, along two opposing walls, hung a series of paintings by Djambawa and a series by Noŋgirrŋa, both depicting the saltwater estate of Yathikpa. Standing before one of his paintings, Djambawa ran his fingers down the strings of diamonds of the Maḏarrpa miny’tji. Then he turned to Noŋgirrŋa’s work, drawing my attention to the zigzaggy mesh of diamonds that crashed like lightning down her bark. “If you stand back,” said Djambawa, “you can see the pattern [of the Maḏarrpa miny’tji ]. They are not the patterns, but the country is still speaking through her.”

Watch The Mulka Project's documentary film Gapu ga Guṉḏa on the art of Noŋgirrŋa Marawili:


– Henry Skerritt

Additional Information

Decade

2015

Medium

Natural pigments on eucalyptus bark

Dimensions (IN)

65 1/8 x 38 1/4

Dimensions (CM)

165.4 x 97.2

Credit

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia.
Museum purchase with funds provided by Maria T. Kluge, 2015. 2015.0007.001.

Narrative

Maḏarrpa

Maḏarrpa is a Yirritja moiety clan. Major spiritual themes include Bäru, a Maḏarrpa ancestor who...

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Songline

Burrut’tji | Lightning Snakes

Burrut’tji is the name for Lightning Snakes. There are several Lightning Snakes, belonging to different...

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Location

Baratjala

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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

Maḏarrpa

Artist Dates

Born c.1939

Noŋgirrŋa Marawili

Noŋgirrŋa Marawili is among Australia’s most acclaimed contemporary artists. She is the daughter of Mundukuḻ Marawili, the wife of Djutjatjutja Munuŋgurr and the mother of Marrnyula and Rerrkirrwaŋa Munuŋgurr—all significant artists. Her works are held in every state collection in Australia, and in 2018, she was honored with a retrospective at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney. She has received numerous awards, including the Telstra Bark Painting Award, which she won in both 2015 and 2019, and the Roberts Family Prize in association with the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ Wynne Prize, which she won in 2019.

Collections Represented

Art Gallery of Ballarat

Art Gallery of New South Wales

Art Gallery of South Australia

Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki

Australian National Maritime Museum

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia

Metropolitan Museum of Art

Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory

Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia

National Gallery of Australia

National Gallery of Victoria

Tate Modern