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Gunybi Ganambarr

Gunybi Ganambarr is an Aboriginal artist from Yirrkala, in the North-eastern Arnhem Land of the Northern Territory.[1] He currently resides in Gängän where he continues to create his art.[2] Ganambarr is considered the founder of the "Found" movement in northeast Arnhem Land, in which artists use recycled materials, onto which are etched sacred designs more commonly painted on eucalyptus bark.[3]

Gunybi Ganambarr
BornApril 15, 1973
Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia
OccupationAboriginal Artist
SpouseLamangirra Marawili

Personal life edit

Gunybi Ganambarr was born on April 15, 1973.[2] His homeland being Yangunbi, an area on the Western shore of Melville Bay, close to where the Giddy River meets the Arafura Sea.[4] He is part of the Ngaymil Clan of the Dhuwa Moiety.[2] Dhuwa being one of the two moieties that make up the Yolngu world, where everything, including people, creatures, and vegetation, are either one or the other.[5] Ganambarr claimed that becoming an artist has allowed him to care more about educating others. He wants everyone to hear his story as he shares about his special home that has existed for thousands and thousands of years.[6]

Ganambarr plays the ceremonial yidaki, also known as a Didgeridoo.[2] In this role, he was sought after by elders to accompany their sacred song.[7] He played the Digeridoo for two of his mother's clans in Dhaḻwaŋu and Maḏarrpa ceremonies, both clans being of the Yirritja moeity.[8][9] Ganambarr spent over a decade as a construction worker and builder for the Laynhapuy Homelands Association, however returned to Gängän, his mother's homeland, later.[2] His mother being a member of the Dhaḻwaŋu clan.[2] The leaders of Ganambarr's mother's clans recognized his talents in ceremony and guided him to become a djunggaya, a caretaker of clan laws, but first encouraged him to share his knowledge through painting.[8]

One of his influential mentors is Djambawa Marawili, whose daughter, Lamangirra Marawili, he is married to.[2]

Ganambarr's upbringing was highlighted by his cultural experience in the art center in Yirrkala; it provides an economy that is inherited by everyone who lives in Arnhem Land. This pathway is clean-cut and allows each individual that enters it to be a well-known artist; anyone can tap into it. Ganambarr explained that any average individual without previous artistic and creative experience can come in with small prints that hold no value, that are now hanging in well-renowned museums around the world. This explanation reveals that the skill set in the community can be adopted by any individual, it is everyone's birthright, just as it was Gunybi's.[6]

Artistic career edit

In his return to Gängän he worked under the authority of the artists Gawirrin Gumana and Yumutjin Wunungmurra and it was precisely this that would lead him to having ceremonial authority within the Dhaḻwaŋu clan.[2] He took the cultural and sacred customs very seriously and has kept those elements strong throughout his art regardless of his modern and experimental approach.[2] He has combined that experience with a startling innovative flair to produce groundbreaking sacred art that is at once novel and still entirely consistent with Yolgnu Madayin law.[10] After working at a building cite in Arnhem Land, building houses, he was able to understand the machinery, grinder, and tools that the artists typically use to collect their bark. Ganambarr gained knowledge from his family, as artist technique was passed down and inherited through generational family ties[6]

Ganambarr began painting at the age of 30.[11] He started his career painting with natural pigments on eucalyptus bark and larrakitj, however through personal investigation and practice would begin to work with reclaimed materials, such as glass, rubber, and even various metals, pushing the boundaries on what Aboriginal art is.[1] He began experimenting with reclaimed materials in 2006.[12] Before Ganambarr's efforts to introduce reclaimed materials into the Aboriginal art scene, most Yolngu artists had been held to the longstanding tradition that in order to paint Madayin miny'tji, or sacred clan designs, one had to use materials that came from country or naturally occurred in the landscape—traditionally, these materials included natural ochres and eucalyptus bark.[13] Ganambarr consulted with his clan elders, arguing that reclaimed or "found" materials such as aluminum metal scraps should also be considered part of the land and therefore eligible for use in artwork depicting sacred designs, opening up avenues for other artists to use new materials in their artwork as well.[13] It is important to note that these reclaimed materials must be found already discarded within the landscape. Ganambarr and followers of the "Found" art movement do not buy new materials, but rather find it discarded or pre-used in some way, for example, discarded roofing insulation or sheet metal.[14] His use of discarded materials in his artworks can be traced to his twelve-year stint as a housebuilder in a Gangan outstation.[11] When asked what led Ganambarr to become an artist, he noted that he wanted to come up with a new technique and new talent[6]

In 2005 he entered the National Sculpture Prize, on invitation by National Gallery of Australia's, Brenda Croft.[2]

In 2008 he won the Xstrata Coal Engineering Indigenous Artist Award, at the Gallery of Modern Art at Queensland Art Gallery.[2]

In 2009 Ganambarr had his first solo exhibition at Annandale Galleries, titled Dhuwa Saltwater.[3] While his work never strays from the tradition of the Yolnu people, he uses his western influence to innovate what it means to make bark art.[3] The exhibition included works where the bark was incised and the remaining shavings added on after, a method not seen before.[15] Dhuwa Saltwater, was Ganambarr's place to really show himself as a revolutionary.[15]

In 2011 he won the West Australian Indigenous Art Award.[2] Within the same year, he also won an allocation in the form of a grant from the Sidney Myer Fund, which he shared with 12 other artists.[16]

In 2012 he would host his second solo exhibition at the Annandale Galleries titled, From My Mind, in which he had works containing chicken wire, roofing insulation and even PVC pipes.[17] He has on countless occasion provoked the idea of breaking the mold and instilling the question as to what is stopping Aboriginal artists from bringing in certain materials.[17] Ganambarr with ease introduced the concept of varying textures.[17]

In 2018 Ganambarr was awarded first prize in the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards for his etched aluminum work Buyku. Speaking on the work, Ganambarr said:

Artworks of this nature have multiple layers of metaphor and meaning which give lessons about the connections between an individual and specific pieces of country (both land and sea), as well as the connections between various clans but also explaining the forces that act upon and within the environment and the mechanics of a spirit’s path through existence. The knowledge referred to by this imagery deepens in complexity and secrecy as a person progresses through a life-long learning  process.[18]

"Yolgnu arist Gunybi Ganambarr's innovative substitution of industrial laminate board for organic materials has transformed the centuries-old tradition of Arnhem Land bark painting, both materially and conceptually.[19]

Ganambarr said his art is inspired by mapping his family, habit, and place, which is the meaning behind his art.[6]

Collections edit

Art Gallery of New South Wales[20]

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College[21]

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia[22]

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York[23]

Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia[24]

Exhibitions edit

  • Young Guns II (16 April - 10 May 2008)[25]
  • Breaking Boundaries: Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art From The Collection (13 December - 25 October 2009)[26]
  • Gunybi Ganambarr, Dhua Saltwater (28 October - 5 December 2009)[27]
  • Yalmakany & Gurrundul Marawili (17 March - 17 April 2010)[28]
  • Gunybi Ganambarr, From My Mind (2 May - 16 June 2012)[29]
  • unDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial (11 May - 22 July 2012)[30]
  • Stock Jewels, Artists of the Gallery (19 June - 14 July 2012)[31]
  • unDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial (3 May - 5 July 2013)[30]
  • Found Gunybi Ganambarr, Djirrirra Wunungmurra & Ralwurrandji Wanambi (23 July - 31 August 2013)[32]

"Found is an exhibition that explores limits."[14] Inspired by Gunybi Ganambarr, permission was granted to his fellow artists to use whatever materials catch their eye. While this is not seen as abandoning the traditional medium of bark, they are expanding their methods and materials with this exhibition.[14]

  • unDisclosed: 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial (25 October 2013 - 5 January 2014)[30]
  • Celebration 25 Years of the AGWA Foundation (21 June - 1 December 2014)[33]
  • Gunybi Ganambarr, Garawan Wanambi, Naminapu Maymuru-White: Notions of Country (3 November - 2 December 2017)[34]
  • Artists of the Gallery (3 July - 3 August 2018)[35]
  • Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka: Mittji (26 September - 26 October 2019)[36]
  • Gunybi Ganambarr: Mother and Child (12 October - 1 December 2019)[37]
  • Tarnanthi (18 October 2019 - 27 January 2020)[38]
  • Steel: Art Design Architecture (7 December 2019 - 9 February 2020)[39]
  • Special Selection, International, Australian & Aboriginal Paintings & Sculpture (8–29 August 2020)[40]
  • Gunybi Ganambarr, Dhanun nalma - Here we are (7 November - 19 December 2020)[41]
  • An Alternative Economics (7 May - 9 July 2022)[42]
  • Transitions (20 August 2022 - 18 July 2023)[43]
  • First Nation Australia (2 February - 22 March 2024)[44]
  • Maḏayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala (September 2022 – Present)[45]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Gunybi Ganambarr | MCA Australia". www.mca.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "About the artist © Gunybi Ganambarr | Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  3. ^ a b c MaddyMatheson (2021-05-03). "Gunybi Ganambarr". Art Collector Magazine. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  4. ^ "Naymil | BUKU-LARRŊGAY MULKA CENTRE". Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  5. ^ "Living Knowledge - Yolŋu Sea Country". livingknowledge.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  6. ^ a b c d e (G. Ganambarr, personal communication, January 29, 2024)
  7. ^ (Ward, Matt, and Paul Johnstone, 2021), 142
  8. ^ a b Gunybi Ganambarr: Maḏayin Artist Profile. Retrieved 2024-05-06 – via www.youtube.com.
  9. ^ "Dhaḻwaŋu". Kluge-Ruhe: Madayin. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  10. ^ (Larrngay Mulka, 2018)
  11. ^ a b "Shibboleth Authentication Request". proxy1.library.virginia.edu. Retrieved 2024-04-23.
  12. ^ Wan̲ambi, Wukun̲; McDonald, Kade; Skerritt, Henry F.; Blake, Andrew; University of Virginia, eds. (2022). Maḏayin: Waltjan̲ ga Waltjan̲buy Yolnuwu Miny'tji Yirrkalawuy = Eight decades of Aboriginal Australian bark painting from Yirrkala. Charlottesville: Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia. p. 340. ISBN 978-1-63681-055-3.
  13. ^ a b Abazi, Petrit (2021). Murrŋiny: a story of metal from the East. Parap, Northern Territory, Australia : Northern Centre for Contemporary Art. p. 11. ISBN 9780646842448.
  14. ^ a b c (Sprague, 2013), 9
  15. ^ a b Kschonsak, Marc; Jao, Christine C; Arthur, Christopher P; Rohou, Alexis L; Bergeron, Philippe; Ortwine, Daniel F; McKerrall, Steven J; Hackos, David H; Deng, Lunbin; Chen, Jun; Li, Tianbo; Dragovich, Peter S; Volgraf, Matthew; Wright, Matthew R; Payandeh, Jian (2023-02-23). "Author response: Cryo-EM reveals an unprecedented binding site for NaV1.7 inhibitors enabling rational design of potent hybrid inhibitors". doi:10.7554/elife.84151.sa2. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  16. ^ "EBSCOhost Login". search.ebscohost.com. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  17. ^ a b c "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | GUNYBI GANAMBARR From My Mind | 2 May - 16 Jun 2012". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  18. ^ "Gunybi Ganambarr wins Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award". Art Guide Australia. 2018-08-10. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  19. ^ (Gunybi Ganambarr | Buyku, 2011)
  20. ^ "Works by Gunybi Ganambarr | Art Gallery of NSW". www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  21. ^ "New Acquisition: Gunybi Ganambarr's "Buyku" (1973)". Hood Museum. 2022-06-27. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  22. ^ "Gunybi Ganambarr, Garrapara, 2018". Kluge-Ruhe: Madayin. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  23. ^ "Gunybi Ganambarr | Buyku". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  24. ^ "Gunybi Ganambarr | MCA Australia". www.mca.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  25. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | Young Guns II | 16 Apr - 10 May 2008". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  26. ^ "Breaking Boundaries". Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  27. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | GUNYBI GANAMBARR Dhuwa Saltwater | 28 Oct - 5 Dec 2009". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  28. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | YALMAKANY & GURRUNDUL MARAWILI from Yirrkala NT | 17 Mar - 17 Apr, 2010". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  29. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | GUNYBI GANAMBARR From My Mind | 2 May - 16 Jun 2012". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  30. ^ a b c "2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial: unDISCLOSED". National Gallery of Australia. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  31. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | STOCK JEWELS Artists of the Gallery | 19 Jun - 14 Jul 2012". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  32. ^ "Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | FOUND GUNYBI GANAMBARR, DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA & RALWURRANDJI WANAMBI | 23 July - 31 August". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  33. ^ "Celebration 25 Years of the... | Exhibitions | MutualArt". www.artgallery.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  34. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | Gunybi Ganambarr, Djambawa Marawili AM, Garawan Wanambi, Naminapu Maymuru-White Notions of Country | November 3 - December 9". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  35. ^ "Artists of the Gallery | Exhibitions | MutualArt". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  36. ^ "MITJI - THE GROUP". Hugo Michell Gallery. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  37. ^ "Exhibition Insight... Mother and Child". JamFactory. 21 October 2019. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  38. ^ "Tarnanthi 2019". AGSA - The Art Gallery of South Australia. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  39. ^ "Archive". JamFactory. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  40. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | Special Selection International, Australian & Aboriginal Paintings & Sculpture | 8–29 August 2020". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  41. ^ "© Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia | GUNYBI GANAMBARR Dhaŋun ŋalma - Here we are | 7th November - 19 December". www.annandalegalleries.com.au. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  42. ^ Brisbane, Institute of Modern Art. "An Alternative Economics". Institute of Modern Art. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  43. ^ "Transitions". Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  44. ^ "First Nation Australia". Second Street Gallery. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  45. ^ "Gunybi Ganambarr, Garrapara, 2018". Kluge-Ruhe: Madayin. Retrieved 2024-05-06.

gunybi, ganambarr, aboriginal, artist, from, yirrkala, north, eastern, arnhem, land, northern, territory, currently, resides, gängän, where, continues, create, ganambarr, considered, founder, found, movement, northeast, arnhem, land, which, artists, recycled, . Gunybi Ganambarr is an Aboriginal artist from Yirrkala in the North eastern Arnhem Land of the Northern Territory 1 He currently resides in Gangan where he continues to create his art 2 Ganambarr is considered the founder of the Found movement in northeast Arnhem Land in which artists use recycled materials onto which are etched sacred designs more commonly painted on eucalyptus bark 3 Gunybi GanambarrBornApril 15 1973Arnhem Land Northern Territory AustraliaOccupationAboriginal ArtistSpouseLamangirra Marawili Contents 1 Personal life 2 Artistic career 3 Collections 4 Exhibitions 5 ReferencesPersonal life editGunybi Ganambarr was born on April 15 1973 2 His homeland being Yangunbi an area on the Western shore of Melville Bay close to where the Giddy River meets the Arafura Sea 4 He is part of the Ngaymil Clan of the Dhuwa Moiety 2 Dhuwa being one of the two moieties that make up the Yolngu world where everything including people creatures and vegetation are either one or the other 5 Ganambarr claimed that becoming an artist has allowed him to care more about educating others He wants everyone to hear his story as he shares about his special home that has existed for thousands and thousands of years 6 Ganambarr plays the ceremonial yidaki also known as a Didgeridoo 2 In this role he was sought after by elders to accompany their sacred song 7 He played the Digeridoo for two of his mother s clans in Dhaḻwaŋu and Maḏarrpa ceremonies both clans being of the Yirritja moeity 8 9 Ganambarr spent over a decade as a construction worker and builder for the Laynhapuy Homelands Association however returned to Gangan his mother s homeland later 2 His mother being a member of the Dhaḻwaŋu clan 2 The leaders of Ganambarr s mother s clans recognized his talents in ceremony and guided him to become a djunggaya a caretaker of clan laws but first encouraged him to share his knowledge through painting 8 One of his influential mentors is Djambawa Marawili whose daughter Lamangirra Marawili he is married to 2 Ganambarr s upbringing was highlighted by his cultural experience in the art center in Yirrkala it provides an economy that is inherited by everyone who lives in Arnhem Land This pathway is clean cut and allows each individual that enters it to be a well known artist anyone can tap into it Ganambarr explained that any average individual without previous artistic and creative experience can come in with small prints that hold no value that are now hanging in well renowned museums around the world This explanation reveals that the skill set in the community can be adopted by any individual it is everyone s birthright just as it was Gunybi s 6 Artistic career editIn his return to Gangan he worked under the authority of the artists Gawirrin Gumana and Yumutjin Wunungmurra and it was precisely this that would lead him to having ceremonial authority within the Dhaḻwaŋu clan 2 He took the cultural and sacred customs very seriously and has kept those elements strong throughout his art regardless of his modern and experimental approach 2 He has combined that experience with a startling innovative flair to produce groundbreaking sacred art that is at once novel and still entirely consistent with Yolgnu Madayin law 10 After working at a building cite in Arnhem Land building houses he was able to understand the machinery grinder and tools that the artists typically use to collect their bark Ganambarr gained knowledge from his family as artist technique was passed down and inherited through generational family ties 6 Ganambarr began painting at the age of 30 11 He started his career painting with natural pigments on eucalyptus bark and larrakitj however through personal investigation and practice would begin to work with reclaimed materials such as glass rubber and even various metals pushing the boundaries on what Aboriginal art is 1 He began experimenting with reclaimed materials in 2006 12 Before Ganambarr s efforts to introduce reclaimed materials into the Aboriginal art scene most Yolngu artists had been held to the longstanding tradition that in order to paint Madayin miny tji or sacred clan designs one had to use materials that came from country or naturally occurred in the landscape traditionally these materials included natural ochres and eucalyptus bark 13 Ganambarr consulted with his clan elders arguing that reclaimed or found materials such as aluminum metal scraps should also be considered part of the land and therefore eligible for use in artwork depicting sacred designs opening up avenues for other artists to use new materials in their artwork as well 13 It is important to note that these reclaimed materials must be found already discarded within the landscape Ganambarr and followers of the Found art movement do not buy new materials but rather find it discarded or pre used in some way for example discarded roofing insulation or sheet metal 14 His use of discarded materials in his artworks can be traced to his twelve year stint as a housebuilder in a Gangan outstation 11 When asked what led Ganambarr to become an artist he noted that he wanted to come up with a new technique and new talent 6 In 2005 he entered the National Sculpture Prize on invitation by National Gallery of Australia s Brenda Croft 2 In 2008 he won the Xstrata Coal Engineering Indigenous Artist Award at the Gallery of Modern Art at Queensland Art Gallery 2 In 2009 Ganambarr had his first solo exhibition at Annandale Galleries titled Dhuwa Saltwater 3 While his work never strays from the tradition of the Yolnu people he uses his western influence to innovate what it means to make bark art 3 The exhibition included works where the bark was incised and the remaining shavings added on after a method not seen before 15 Dhuwa Saltwater was Ganambarr s place to really show himself as a revolutionary 15 In 2011 he won the West Australian Indigenous Art Award 2 Within the same year he also won an allocation in the form of a grant from the Sidney Myer Fund which he shared with 12 other artists 16 In 2012 he would host his second solo exhibition at the Annandale Galleries titled From My Mind in which he had works containing chicken wire roofing insulation and even PVC pipes 17 He has on countless occasion provoked the idea of breaking the mold and instilling the question as to what is stopping Aboriginal artists from bringing in certain materials 17 Ganambarr with ease introduced the concept of varying textures 17 In 2018 Ganambarr was awarded first prize in the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards for his etched aluminum work Buyku Speaking on the work Ganambarr said Artworks of this nature have multiple layers of metaphor and meaning which give lessons about the connections between an individual and specific pieces of country both land and sea as well as the connections between various clans but also explaining the forces that act upon and within the environment and the mechanics of a spirit s path through existence The knowledge referred to by this imagery deepens in complexity and secrecy as a person progresses through a life long learning process 18 Yolgnu arist Gunybi Ganambarr s innovative substitution of industrial laminate board for organic materials has transformed the centuries old tradition of Arnhem Land bark painting both materially and conceptually 19 Ganambarr said his art is inspired by mapping his family habit and place which is the meaning behind his art 6 Collections editArt Gallery of New South Wales 20 Hood Museum of Art Dartmouth College 21 Kluge Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia 22 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 23 Museum of Contemporary Art Australia 24 Exhibitions editYoung Guns II 16 April 10 May 2008 25 Breaking Boundaries Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art From The Collection 13 December 25 October 2009 26 Gunybi Ganambarr Dhua Saltwater 28 October 5 December 2009 27 Yalmakany amp Gurrundul Marawili 17 March 17 April 2010 28 Gunybi Ganambarr From My Mind 2 May 16 June 2012 29 unDisclosed 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial 11 May 22 July 2012 30 Stock Jewels Artists of the Gallery 19 June 14 July 2012 31 unDisclosed 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial 3 May 5 July 2013 30 Found Gunybi Ganambarr Djirrirra Wunungmurra amp Ralwurrandji Wanambi 23 July 31 August 2013 32 Found is an exhibition that explores limits 14 Inspired by Gunybi Ganambarr permission was granted to his fellow artists to use whatever materials catch their eye While this is not seen as abandoning the traditional medium of bark they are expanding their methods and materials with this exhibition 14 unDisclosed 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial 25 October 2013 5 January 2014 30 Celebration 25 Years of the AGWA Foundation 21 June 1 December 2014 33 Gunybi Ganambarr Garawan Wanambi Naminapu Maymuru White Notions of Country 3 November 2 December 2017 34 Artists of the Gallery 3 July 3 August 2018 35 Buku Larrŋgay Mulka Mittji 26 September 26 October 2019 36 Gunybi Ganambarr Mother and Child 12 October 1 December 2019 37 Tarnanthi 18 October 2019 27 January 2020 38 Steel Art Design Architecture 7 December 2019 9 February 2020 39 Special Selection International Australian amp Aboriginal Paintings amp Sculpture 8 29 August 2020 40 Gunybi Ganambarr Dhanun nalma Here we are 7 November 19 December 2020 41 An Alternative Economics 7 May 9 July 2022 42 Transitions 20 August 2022 18 July 2023 43 First Nation Australia 2 February 22 March 2024 44 Maḏayin Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala September 2022 Present 45 References edit a b Gunybi Ganambarr MCA Australia www mca com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 a b c d e f g h i j k l About the artist c Gunybi Ganambarr Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 a b c MaddyMatheson 2021 05 03 Gunybi Ganambarr Art Collector Magazine Retrieved 2023 05 02 Naymil BUKU LARRŊGAY MULKA CENTRE Retrieved 2023 05 02 Living Knowledge Yolŋu Sea Country livingknowledge anu edu au Retrieved 2023 05 02 a b c d e G Ganambarr personal communication January 29 2024 Ward Matt and Paul Johnstone 2021 142 a b Gunybi Ganambarr Maḏayin Artist Profile Retrieved 2024 05 06 via www youtube com Dhaḻwaŋu Kluge Ruhe Madayin Retrieved 2024 05 06 Larrngay Mulka 2018 a b Shibboleth Authentication Request proxy1 library virginia edu Retrieved 2024 04 23 Wan ambi Wukun McDonald Kade Skerritt Henry F Blake Andrew University of Virginia eds 2022 Maḏayin Waltjan ga Waltjan buy Yolnuwu Miny tji Yirrkalawuy Eight decades of Aboriginal Australian bark painting from Yirrkala Charlottesville Kluge Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia p 340 ISBN 978 1 63681 055 3 a b Abazi Petrit 2021 Murrŋiny a story of metal from the East Parap Northern Territory Australia Northern Centre for Contemporary Art p 11 ISBN 9780646842448 a b c Sprague 2013 9 a b Kschonsak Marc Jao Christine C Arthur Christopher P Rohou Alexis L Bergeron Philippe Ortwine Daniel F McKerrall Steven J Hackos David H Deng Lunbin Chen Jun Li Tianbo Dragovich Peter S Volgraf Matthew Wright Matthew R Payandeh Jian 2023 02 23 Author response Cryo EM reveals an unprecedented binding site for NaV1 7 inhibitors enabling rational design of potent hybrid inhibitors doi 10 7554 elife 84151 sa2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help EBSCOhost Login search ebscohost com Retrieved 2024 04 24 a b c c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia GUNYBI GANAMBARR From My Mind 2 May 16 Jun 2012 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Gunybi Ganambarr wins Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award Art Guide Australia 2018 08 10 Retrieved 2023 05 03 Gunybi Ganambarr Buyku 2011 Works by Gunybi Ganambarr Art Gallery of NSW www artgallery nsw gov au Retrieved 2023 05 03 New Acquisition Gunybi Ganambarr s Buyku 1973 Hood Museum 2022 06 27 Retrieved 2023 05 03 Gunybi Ganambarr Garrapara 2018 Kluge Ruhe Madayin Retrieved 2023 05 03 Gunybi Ganambarr Buyku The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2023 05 03 Gunybi Ganambarr MCA Australia www mca com au Retrieved 2023 05 03 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia Young Guns II 16 Apr 10 May 2008 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Breaking Boundaries Queensland Art Gallery Gallery of Modern Art Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia GUNYBI GANAMBARR Dhuwa Saltwater 28 Oct 5 Dec 2009 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia YALMAKANY amp GURRUNDUL MARAWILI from Yirrkala NT 17 Mar 17 Apr 2010 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia GUNYBI GANAMBARR From My Mind 2 May 16 Jun 2012 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 a b c 2nd National Indigenous Art Triennial unDISCLOSED National Gallery of Australia Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia STOCK JEWELS Artists of the Gallery 19 Jun 14 Jul 2012 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia FOUND GUNYBI GANAMBARR DJIRRIRRA WUNUNGMURRA amp RALWURRANDJI WANAMBI 23 July 31 August www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Celebration 25 Years of the Exhibitions MutualArt www artgallery wa gov au Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia Gunybi Ganambarr Djambawa Marawili AM Garawan Wanambi Naminapu Maymuru White Notions of Country November 3 December 9 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Artists of the Gallery Exhibitions MutualArt www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 MITJI THE GROUP Hugo Michell Gallery Retrieved 2023 05 02 Exhibition Insight Mother and Child JamFactory 21 October 2019 Retrieved 2023 05 02 Tarnanthi 2019 AGSA The Art Gallery of South Australia Retrieved 2023 05 02 Archive JamFactory Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia Special Selection International Australian amp Aboriginal Paintings amp Sculpture 8 29 August 2020 www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 c Annandale Galleries Sydney Australia GUNYBI GANAMBARR Dhaŋun ŋalma Here we are 7th November 19 December www annandalegalleries com au Retrieved 2023 05 02 Brisbane Institute of Modern Art An Alternative Economics Institute of Modern Art Retrieved 2023 05 02 Transitions Queensland Art Gallery Gallery of Modern Art Retrieved 2023 05 02 First Nation Australia Second Street Gallery Retrieved 2024 05 06 Gunybi Ganambarr Garrapara 2018 Kluge Ruhe Madayin Retrieved 2024 05 06 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gunybi Ganambarr amp oldid 1223489732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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