Murrŋiny
25 sep 2021
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
BUKU-LARRŊGAY MULKA CENTRE
AND NCCA
Vimy Lane Parap
Phone +61 8 8981 5368
OPENING HOURS
Wed to Fri 10 am – 4 pm
Sat 10 am – 2 pm
A group of eight Yolŋu artists from Yirrkala have come to rescue, recycle and rework these battered warriors in new ways which have never been seen before.
Murrŋiny is the Yolŋu word for steel. It is also the name by which this nation was known by its neighbours and the first Europeans who encountered them. This name references the shovel nosed spears made here since pre-Cook times. Old signs are new again.
Read the full essay by Will Stubbs in the exhibition catalogue.
A partnership between Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre, Salon Art Projects and the Northern Centre for Contemporary Art.
IMAGE: Wanapati Yunupiŋu working on found street sign, Gurtha, 2020, 52 x 45 cm, found and etched aluminium
PHOTO BY DAVID WICKENS – BUKU-LARRŊGAY MULKA CENTRE
The full catalogue of works in the exhibition can be viewed here.
The high resolution file is 110 mb showing full detail of the works.
Exhibition catalogue $49.95
To celebrate and mark the occasion of this extraordinary exhibition, we have collaborated with Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre and NCCA to produce an accompanying catalogue that takes you on a beautiful photographic journey of the formation of this movement.
Featuring artists' stories, biographies and images connecting their work to country.
Stunning artwork photography and close-up detail of the artists' mastery and workmanship in transferring their designs to metal. Landscape photography that connects artists to place and to story.
With gratitude, we have been able to feature a small selection of rare archival photographs by anthropologist Donald Thomson, who lived and worked in north east Arnhem Land during the 1930s and the early years of WWII. These photographs have been reproduced with permission from the Thomson family and Museums Victoria.
The exhibition is a partnership between Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre, Salon Art Projects and the Northern Centre for Contemporary Art.
Barayuwa Munuŋgurr
Wanapati Yunupiŋu
Wukun Wanambi
Binygurr Wirrpanda
Ganpilbil Maymuru
Wurrandan Marawili
Ishmael Marika
144 pages
290 x 240 mm
Foreword by Petrit Abazi, Director,
Northern Centre for Contemporary Art
Preface by Matt Ward and Paul Johnstone, Salon Art Projects
Essays by Will Stubbs and Gunybi Ganambarr,
Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre
Artwork photography by Fiona Morrison
Photography by David Wickens, Will Stubbs, Peter Eve, Ruark Lewis, Saul Steed, Greentantphotos, Gutiŋara Yunupiŋu, Joseph Brady, Sarah Jane Harvey, Ishmael Marika