South-East Australia · Melbourne · Language: Yorta Yorta
Lin Onus played a pivotal role in the recognition of Aboriginal art as an expression of a contemporary and dynamic living culture. Prior to his premature death at just 47, he was a prominent, strident, yet non-confrontational agent in renegotiating the history of colonial and Aboriginal Australia. His father, Bill Onus, was the founder of the Aboriginal Advancement League in Victoria and a prominent maker of artefacts in Melbourne. Growing up as a young Koori man, Lin lived in a cultural environment that encouraged and facilitated exposure to visiting Aboriginal artists, including Albert Namatjira. Onus began his artistic life assisting his father in decorating artefacts, going on to develop skills working on metal and painting with airbrush as a panel beater; by 1974 he was painting watercolours and photorealist landscapes. In the 1970s he completed a set of paintings on the first Aboriginal guerilla fighter Mosquito, which holds pride of place on the walls of the Advancement League in Melbourne, to this day.
Onus, an eloquent speaker, rose to prominence from the early 1980s as an advocate for the Aboriginal arts movement and an important player in the development of the Aboriginal Arts Board of the Australia Council. Although represented by Gabrielle Pizzi in Melbourne and Painter’s Gallery in Sydney, his career as an artist languished until in 1986, when he visited Maningrida in Arnhem Land. His outlook on both life and painting substantially shifted.
During his stay at Gamerdi, an outstation from Maningrida, he was accepted as a son to renowned cultural custodians Jack Wunuwun and John Bullun Bulun who gave him permission to depict stories and use clan designs in his work that would enable him to develop the distinctive visual language that characterized much of his future work. His art practice from this period on has been described as a 'kind of post-modern Bowerbird Dreaming' (Nicholls 2001: 536) – unique synthesis of Western and Aboriginal systems of organizing space, vision and design. In many of these works, figurative elements are depicted in traditional form as they appear, often with deft subtlety, within a photorealist landscape. This led one critic to comment that in Onus’s work 'landscape art is no longer an unconscious carrier of myths of domination … (but) demands the artist deconstruct in some manner these approaches and display an awareness of history and ideology' (Radon 1997: 16). In these works Onus was imparting his knowledge that beyond the immediately apparent there is another dimension, a Dreaming reality that anyone can become aware of if only they open their eyes and their minds to its presence.
Onus’s installation Fruit Bats was exhibited in the Australian Perspecta 1991, consisting of a hills hoist carrying a multitude of fiberglass bats, painted with rarrk, a ceremonial Arhnem Land crosshatch design. In his many depictions Barmah Forrest, the flooded Eucalypts near his Yorta Yorta homeland at Cumerangunja, there are often cross hatched-fish beneath the water’s surface or in one work a jigsaw puzzle piece of the panoramic landscape misshapen, unable to fit, a comment on the irreperable damage to the Murray river ecosystem. Onus, a great communicator, was acutely aware of the desire amongst non-Aboriginal viewers to understand the meaning of the concept of the Dreaming.
He went beyond a post-colonial or postmodern self-awareness and in many works he challenged the Eurocentric view of history and in its place provided an alternative vision, an alternative history, stating 'some people write history, I can’t write so I paint' (cited in Isaacs 1989: 26). In Kapt’n Koori 1985 Onus created an Indigenous role model to rival Superman, for his son, Tiriki and in 1988 he painted discarded beer cans littering the cracked dry surface of an Aboriginal homeland. Distinguished academic and writer Christine Nicholls once described Onus’s humor as ‘a postmodernism without tears', referring to his unapologetic appropriation of both Western and Aboriginal iconography. Onus was acutely aware of the preoccupation of so-called ‘experts’ with legitimacy and played an important role in the unfolding public debate over authenticity in Aboriginal art. Having been criticised for mixing traditional and urban iconography inappropriately, he wrote in Language and Lasers a response noting that the issue of ‘appropriation’ rested on the premise that Aboriginal art is a traditional form that should remain static and fixed in time in order to remain pure. He pointed out how this notion was a double standard being imposed on Aboriginal artists, given that the development of Western art has been 'attended by an equal mixture of existing practices and influence' (1990: 14). It appears those least concerned about Onus’s appropriation were the Aboriginal community into which he was introduced who “were anxious to help me find my way. In time this led to my adoption within the Wunuwun family' (1990: 15).
Lin Onus’s manual skills and experimental zeal coupled with an intense desire to embrace different cultures manifested itself in his avid adoption of new materials and technology, such as fibre-glass, plastics, silicon, and humorously time saving devices such as rarrk making stamps and dotting machines. He was driven in his efforts to take Aboriginal art into the new century. Onus wanted to challenge the myth that in embracing new technologies Indigenous peoples would lose their culture pointing out, as just one example, that the four wheel drive has allowed more ceremonial activity to be conducted than ever before. Onus was vocal not only across the diverse mediums he employed in his art, but also in his role as the chairman of the Aboriginal Arts Board of the Australia Council, a founding member of the artist’s copyright agency Viscopy, and an eloquent speaker enlisted by peak arts bodies to act as a spokesman at the National Press Club and other prestigious gatherings. Above all, he was an artist whose work made 'no distinction between the political and the beautiful’. His contribution changed forever the perceptions about the nature of Aboriginal Art. In the inadequate terminology of our times it 'put urban Aboriginal art, as it is popularly known, onto the cultural map in Australia' (Nicholls 2001: 536). His passing was commemorated with a retrospective exhibition Urban Dingo, which toured nationally.
Isaacs, J. 1989. Aboriginality in Contemporary Aboriginal Paintings and Prints, Queensland University Press, Australia.
Lynn, V. 1991. ‘Pushing Back the Boundaries: The 1991 ‘Australian Perspecta’ exhibition,’ Look, Art Gallery Society of New South Wales. Heidelberg, Vic. August 2001: 20-21.
Newstead, A. November 13, 1996. ‘Into the Dreamtime,’ The Sydney Morning Herald: p17.
Nicholls, C. 2001. ‘Urban Dingo: Postmodernism without Tears,’ Art and Australia, Vol 38. No. 4. Jun/Jul/Aug 2001: 536-538.
Onus, L., May 1990, 'Language and lasers,' Art Monthly Australia Supplement (The land, the city - the emergence of urban Aboriginal art), no 30.14-15, 19.
Radok, S. 1997. ‘The Sublime and the parochial: the foot of God,’ Artlink, Vol. 17. No 3: 14-17.
Lin Onus created a distinctive body of work which bridged Western pictorial traditions and indigenous cultural authority. While his career was cut short by his death in 1996, more than 30 years later his reputation continues to grow through institutional recognition, and a market that his limited output can barely satisfy. With this artist demand for major works will always exceed supply.
Lin Onus produced a relatively small number of major paintings during the late 1980s and early to mid 1990s when he created the paintings that are most favored in the market. In these works, animals and objects and the surrounding Bahmah Forest landscape are reflected in water. These works were executed with remarkable technical precision and are now regarded as the pinnacle of his achievement. Since 2021, five large canvases have featured in his top ten sales, confirming sustained collector appetite for large, ambitious compositions from this pivotal period. The fact that a significant number of his major works are held in major public collections, further limits the availability of major works, thereby enhancing their desirability when they do appear in the open market.
Onus’s smaller works including works on paper, illustration board and editioned prints trade more frequently at more accessible levels. These are important within the context of Onus’s broader practice, and their greater availability has seen Onus’s yearly average fluctuate wildly. These works have increased his renown, but in those years when no major works have been offered, have resulted in lower yearly average sales.
Nevertheless, in 2021, Fish, Ferns and Rocks 1995, a small finely resolved gouache painting on card (44 x 76.5cm), achieved $122,727, demonstrating a strengthening demand for high-quality works even outside the large canvas paintings. Four similarly beautiful gouaches sold that year around the $100,000 mark. In 2025, the tongue in cheek, Michael and I are just slipping down to the Pub for a Minute 1992, a gouache on board measuring 50 x 38 cm (which was subsequently reproduced to publish limited edition of prints) realized a price in excess of $300,000, the highest price paid for a work on a non-canvas surface. Given the success of the print edition, it was, however, one of his most recognised images.
Until the sale of a spectacular nude, Robyn 1995, in 2013, all of his ten top prices had been for large landscape works, often with indigenized elements. 2013 was, in fact, a particularly good year for the artist and this turned the spotlight firmly on his work. In 2015, no less than four works entered his top ten including Frogs and Waterlillies which sold for $512,400. This was a truly amazing result for the time: a game changer given the fact that the work measured only 91.2 x 121.5 cm. Sotheby's, and its vendor, would have been absolutely delighted. In 2017, this record was broken once again, with the 200 x 400 cm diptych, Riddle of the Koi 1994, selling for $561,200 at Deutscher & Hackett. That year he was the third most successful artist of the movement, surpassed only by Emily Kngwarreye (whose record-breaking work sold for over 2 million dollars) and Albert Namatjira.
In 2018 13 of 16 works sold for a total just shy of $2 million. Sotheby's sold two major airport commissions measuring 200 x 550 cm each for $793,000 and $671,000 respectively. The following year Fish and Storm Clouds 1994, which had featured on the cover of the Lawson~Menzies Sydney May Aboriginal Fine Art catalogue in 2007 and sold for $288,000 (Lot 57), was offered once more at Menzies and sold for $515,454 representing a very tidy profit indeed. Trade remained exceptionally brisk through 2021 and 2022 with prices exceeding earlier benchmarks and total yearly sales passing the $2-million mark.
A predictable lull followed, as less work appeared in 2023, though the beautiful, Deep Water (Matong) 1995 (91 x 152 cm), achieved $343,636 with Deutscher and Menzies, nearly $100,000 over its top estimate. Many prints and works on paper in 2024 boosted several major paintings which sold that year, bringing the total yearly sales past $1.5 million. This included one of Onus’s rare nudes; The Joy of Fish, The Ripple 1994, a canvas which achieved $392,727. Though this was a drop from its previous height of $429,545 in 2023, it was still within the Menzies’ estimate. Meanwhile, Wirrirr Wirrirr (Rainbow Birds) soared over its estimate of $200,000 – $250,000 to sell for $331,364 with Singer and Singer. Alongside 2025s record selling gouache (mentioned above), the inspirational painting, Arafura Swamp 1V 1996 (182 x182cm) achieved $368,182 with Deutscher and Menzies, bringing 2025s total yearly sales up to just under the $1million dollar mark.
Onus produced a large body of paintings that explored his interest in political portraiture and social commentary, always with a biting edge. These works are yet to be tested on the market. Their appearance should be attended with a great deal of interest and continue to attract wealthy buyers. Lin Onus lived a brief but eventful life, during which he forged his way into the forefront of Aboriginal art politics. His unique status as a ‘boundary rider’ was seen in both his ability as a spokesperson for his people and as a practicing artist. He was able to bridge worlds in an approachable and alluring manner. His paintings and prints have an enduring appeal and represent an opportunity for art lovers to own works of great beauty and remarkable technical virtuosity. The sky is the limit when it comes to prices. Given the rarity of his major works, it is only a matter of time before one sells for more than $1 million. They are that hot.
Rank #3Cumulative AAMI 102.26
Annual AAMI rating by year — hover or tap a bar for the exact figure.
How the AAMI rating is calculated
The AAMI (Aboriginal Art Market Index) measures an artist’s auction performance each year. Each annual rating combines the value of works sold (total sales and clearance rate), the number of works offered, and the average price achieved — with adjustments that temper thin trading years and a rising annual price threshold, so results stay comparable over time. The yearly ratings are added together into an artist’s Cumulative AAMI score, which determines their rank in the index.