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Artist
Galuma Maymuru
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Born
1951
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Died
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Title
Guwak
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Date of Production
2003
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Medium
ochre, pva fixative, on bark (Eucalyptus tetradonta)
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Dimensions
1140 x 480 mm
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Credit Details
Purchased, Colin Hicks Caldwell Bequest, 2004
Galuma Maymuru
Guwak
One of the first women to paint the sacred miny'tji or clan
designs, Galuma Maymuru was taught to paint by her father
Narritjin, a well known Yolgnu artist from the 1960s-70s. A
member of the Manggalili clan, whose homeland is located at
Djarrakpi on the tip of Cape Shield in North east Arnhem Land,
Galuma has depicted Guwak which is associated with the ownership of
her clan country and death and mortuary rituals.
When the Guwak people who had been sent by the Yirritja
ancestral being Barama found Djarrakpi they alighted on the sacred
Maruwili or bush cashew tree. In this painting the Guwak are
represented by the Koel Cuckoo entwined in possum fur string
that was spun by Marrngu, the ringtail possum. It is this
string that provides a conduit for the Mangalili souls to the Milky
Way. The wavy bands of crosshatching refer to many things
including the sand country created by the ancestral woman
Nyapalingu who is represented by the X shapes in the painting.