Click to enlargeMolly Karadada
2008
- Region
- Kimberley
- Community
- Kalumburu
Wandjina's, 1987
natural earth pigments on bark
53 x 22 cm
- Provenance
- Painted at Kalumburu, WA
Cooee Aboriginal Art Gallery, NSW
Private Collection, Berlin Germany
Art Leven (formerly Cooee Art) First Nations Fine Art Auction, Redfern Lot 42
- Artwork story
- It is said that the Wandjina is the embodiment of the rain spirit and creation ancestor of the Wonnambal, Ngarinyin and Worrora peoples of the North West Kimberley. Wandjina are prolific along the walls of caves in the plateau areas of the North Kimberley coast and are unique to this region. They are always pictured using red ochre from a frontal aspect, with no mouth, large black eyes, and a slit or beak-like nose and are usually depicted in a veil of dots which represent the blood and water mix of man and animal. According to Dreamtime, the Wandjina emerge from the clouds to bring the monsoon rain each season. As such, it is a powerful fertility figure that keeps the spirits of unborn babies in special rockpools and waterholes.