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Aboriginal Art Gallery UK

Phyliss Nakamarra, Watanuma, 2309107 (87cmx28cm)

£720.00

This painting depicts designs associated with the soakage site of Watanuma, north-west of the Kintore Community. A group of ancestral women once gathered at Watanuma to perform the dances and sign songs assoicated with the area. The women also spun hair-string for making nyimparra (hair-string skirts), which are worn by both men and women during ceremonies. Upon completion of these ceremonies the women continued their travels to the rockhole site of Malparingya and then continued east to Pinari, also north-west of Kintore. The parallel lines represent the tali (sandhills) throughout this area. As they travelled the women gathered large quantities of the edible fruit known as pura, or bush tomato, from. the small shrub Solanum chippendalei. This fruit is the size of a small apricot and, after the seeds have been removed, can be stored for long periods by halving the fruit and skewering them onto a stick.

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