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Organic Cotton Scarf – Dogwood

$55.00 inc. GST

Delightful lightweight scarf, the design is based on an original artwork by Liddy Walker. This scarf is so soft to touch and lovely to wear, as well as being ethically produced.

Dimensions: 70 x 200cm

Composition: Woven organic cotton

 

In stock

SKU: ALWA624OCS Category: Tags: , ,

Description

Artist: Liddy Napanangka Walker (dec)

Liddy was a member of Warlukurlangu Artists in Yuendumu in the Northern Territory.

Royalties on sales are paid to the artists/their families

Story: Wakirlpirri Jukurrpa (Dogwood Dreaming)

The image expresses the hanging seedpods of the Wakirlpirri tree.
” I paint my father Japangardi’s Dreaming and my grandfather’s Dreaming. Mt Theo is my father’s country and that’s what I’m painting the special Dreamings from. The Dreamings I paint are bush tomato, goanna….Goanna likes to fight and is a lover boy. And I paint seed pods and bush potato and hopping mouse. There are lots of stories… I paint strongly.”

Liddy was born in 1925 at Mt Doreen, and spent her younger years living with her family in bush camps. She regularly visited her country around Mt Theo, west of Yuendumu. She lived in Yuendumu, a remote Aboriginal community located 290 kms north-west of Alice Springs, in the NT of Australia, since it was first established and worked in the community in various pastoral care roles including cooking for the sick or the elderly. She started painting on canvas not long after Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation, an Aboriginal owned and governed art centre located in Yuendumu, was established in 1985 and Liddy became one of the most important members. Liddy painted her father’s Jukurrpa stories, Dreaming stories which relate directly to her land, its features and animals. These stories were passed down to her by her father and her grandfather and their parents before them for millennia.

Manufactured by Better World Arts (South Australia) – accredited by the Fair Trade Association of Australia

Better World Arts ethos “By developing new and innovative projects, we can continue to distribute generous royalties to artists and support economic sustainability for communities in developing regions.”