Papunya Painting Out of the Desert

Discover the rich and special meanings behind Indigenous ‘dot patterning’ in ‘Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert’.
Featuring a stunning collection of rarely seen
artworks, ‘Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert’
will answer all the questions you have wanted to
ask about this unique style of Indigenous art.
Opening at the Australian Museum this July, local audiences will be treated to a spectacular exhibition that will transport people of all ages into the epicentre of Western Desert Aboriginal culture right in the heart of Sydney.
For the first time in a major public exhibition,
‘Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert’, brings
together some of the early masterpieces of the
renowned Papunya Tula art movement that
spanned the 1970s and early 1980s.
Set against the backdrop of their ‘desert studio’
at Papunya in Australia’s Northern Territory,
Central and Western Desert artists created a
body of work that transformed understandings
of Aboriginal art.
On large canvases and suitcase-sized boards they
experimented with colour and style to tell their
Dreaming stories linked to land, nation, people
and history while uncovering the perpetuation of
a living culture.
Developed and presented by the National
Museum of Australia, almost 50,000 people
visited the exhibition while it was in Canberra last
year. Now Sydney audiences will have the
opportunity to view 37 of these powerful
paintings and 24 cultural objects in Papunya
Painting: Out of the Desert.
Visitors will not only marvel at the impressive
scale and beauty of the designs - many of the
paintings tower over 2 metres tall and 3 metres
wide - but they will also have the rare chance to
discover the real meanings behind these
significant artworks.
While Papunya-style art and ‘dot patterning’
has become identified with Australia, few
people are aware of the history, culture and
rituals behind the development of this
signature painting style.
Consultation and collaboration with
community elders, artists and arts advisors has
endowed the exhibition with personal stories
and opinions that help to provide an absorbing
cultural and historical context for these works.
From stories of ancestral ties and cultural
landscapes to religious, social and family
relationships - these are not just artworks, they
reveal the lives and experiences of the artists
who made them. And in doing so, they compel
visitors to revisit their understanding of the
Papunya art movement, as well as the
significance of the artists who participated in it.
Vivien Johnson, Curator of the exhibition, said
"The paintings in this exhibition are classic
1970s Papunya paintings, layered like the skins
of an onion and all with depths of meaning
awaiting discovery."
"Visitors to ‘Papunya Painting: Out of the
Desert’ will be able to experience some of the
early masterpieces from the Papunya Tula
Artists company, acclaimed both nationally and
internationally as one of the most extraordinary
artistic phenomena of the late twentieth and
early twenty-first centuries," Vivien continued.
‘Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert’
opens at the Australian Museum on 5 July
2008 (until 2 November 2008). Admission
(including general Museum entry): $15
adult; $10 concession / WYD08 pilgrims; $7
child (5 - 15 years); Free for children under
5 years of age.
WARNING: Visitors should be aware that this
exhibition includes images and names of
deceased people that may cause sadness or
distress to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples.
Australian Museum
6 College Street
Sydney NSW 2010 Australia
t 61 2 9320 6000
www.australianmuseum.net.au
Opening hours
9:30am - 5pm seven days a week.
(except 25 December)
Cost (including general Museum
entry)
$15 adults
$10 concession / WYD08 pilgrims
$7 child (5-15 years)
$37 family ticket (2 adults, 2 children)
FREE for children under 5 years