Aboriginal Art

Aboriginal Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 68. Kaakuratintja, 2002.

Property from The Steve Martin and Anne Stringfield Collection, New York

Willy Tjungurrayi

Kaakuratintja, 2002

Auction Closed

May 25, 09:41 PM GMT

Estimate

70,000 - 100,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from The Steve Martin and Anne Stringfield Collection, New York


Willy Tjungurrayi

Circa 1932

Kaakuratintja, 2002



Synthetic polymer paint on canvas

Bears Papunya Tula Artists catalogue number WT0211025 on the verso

72 in by 60 ¼ in (183 by 153 cm)

Papunya Tula Artists, Alice Springs
Private Collection, Sydney, acquired from the above
D’Lan Contemporary, Melbourne
The Steve Martin and Anne Stringfield Collection, New York

The exacting minimalism of Kaakuratintja is characteristic of Willy Tjungurrayi’s mature style of painting. The younger brother of the renowned Pintupi painter Yala Yala Gibbs Tjungurrayi (circa 1928-1998) who was one of the original group of Papunya painters in 1971, Willy Tjungurrayi first emerged as an artist in the public domain in 1976. A decade later he became one of the leading exponents among the Pintupi painters of the matrix of circle and line compositions that map out the sacred sites and pathways of the great ancestors, the Tingari. The Tingari are described as creator beings who traversed vast stretches of what we now know as the western deserts of Australia.


They formed features of the landscape and endowed people with sacred law. Today, the esoteric knowledge of the Tingari continues to be taught to Pintupi through the various stages of ceremonial development. By the turn of the century, Willy Tjungurrayi was among a small group of Pintupi artists who introduced a style of painting that went beyond the iconographic elements of desert painting. Their paintings feature rhythmic linear compositions that pulsate with the ancestral powers imbued in the land by the Tingari, and by light – the physical light in the land and metaphoric light of revelation and attainment of knowledge. In effect, paintings such as Kaakuratintja convey a sense of the shimmering heat of the Australian desert landscape while capturing the ineffable nature of the ancestral forces that reside within it, spiritual powers that are tapped in ceremony to imbue participants within a sacred space.

Wally Caruana

This painting is sold with the accompanying Papunya Tula Artists documentation and catalogue number WT0211025.