The Western Desert is a region of Central Australia that covers an estimated 600,000 square kilometres, and is home to several Aboriginal language groups. Contemporary Indigenous art, particularly the now widely recognised 'dot art' technique, originated in the small community of Papunya in the Northern Territory, notably with the establishment of the famed Papunya Tula Artist's Collective in the early 1970s. One of the last places on the continent to be influenced by European colonisation, artists from the Western Desert paint with great cultural authority, creating unique, timeless designs that translate aspects of their Country and its sacred stories.
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Walala TjapaltjarriTingari, 202170 x 196 cm
27 1/2 x 77 1/8 inchesacrylic on canvasSold -
Maureen BakerMinyma Kutjara (Two Women), 201890 x 147 cm
35 3/8 x 57 7/8 inchesacrylic on linenMaureen Baker, Minyma Kutjara (Two Women), 2018$ 4,200.00 SALE - was $4,950 -
Walala TjapaltjarriTingari, 202170 x 198 cm
27 1/2 x 78 inchesacrylic on canvasWalala Tjapaltjarri, Tingari, 2021$ 3,950.00 -
Gail NapangatiBush Onion Story, 202260 x 120 cm
23 5/8 x 47 1/4 inchesacrylic on linenGail Napangati, Bush Onion Story, 2022$ 937.00 SALE - was $1,250
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