Wakewaken Sugar Bag Woman, 7682-11

Certificate of Authenticity Included
A$400

Artwork Details

Medium Acrylic (Requires Framing)
Dimensions 41cm (W) x 61cm (H) x 0.2cm (D)
Review Stars 21,229 Customer Reviews

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Artwork Description

Don has painted a Wakewaken (Sugarbag Woman) from country east of the Mann River. These wakewaken originally lived under a paperbark tree in a creek which has very cold water. This is the same place that Ngalyod (the Rainbow Serpent) sometimes resides. They left their underwater home and moved around the country gathering bush fruit which they placed in their burlbe dilly bags). Wark, the black crow, became angry that they were stealing his country so cut them in half with a stone axe. They then became mankung or sugarbag, the honey of native bees. They also left their imprint as a rock painting in the artist's Mankung Djang (Sugarbag Dreaming) country. In earlier days when Aboriginal people from this region wanted to ensure that sugarbag would be plentiful each year they would swim in the creek and pull up the water weeds near the base of the paperbark tree where the wakewaken resided. The black area represents the mankung inside a tree trunk.

This painting needs to be framed. It’s also being sent direct from the artist at a remote art centre, Injalak Arts, in west Arnhem Land, in the NT desert. Please note there is only one mail plane a week that takes the artwork to Gunbalanya. The tracking information is then received a week later when the mail plane returns so often the paintings are delivered before we receive the tracking information. Please expect a slightly longer wait for this very special artwork to arrive.

Artist Bio

Don is one Arhnem Land’s most senior and respected artists. Don fondly remembers painting amongst the stone country with some of its most recognized artistsincluding Bardayal ‘Lofty’ Nadjamerrek, and Kalarriya ‘Jimmy’ Namarnyilk.Don had his first solo exhibition in 2004. The Australian newspaper Nicholas Rothwell wrote, "By any standards this debut exhibition is worthy of sustained attention in the national media". The freshness of Don's paintings prompted the National Gallery of Australia to acquire two works from the RAFT Artspace in Darwin. He was selected for the prestigious National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards in Darwin in 2003, 2005, 2006 and more recently in 2014.Don lives in Gunbalanya (Oenpelli) in western Arnhem Land and can often be found painting under the verandah at Injalak Arts.