Lorna Ward Napanangka Indigenous Australian, b. 1961
Although stylistically diverse, connecting Napanangka’s works is her focus on the site of Marrapinti. A sacred waterhole west of the Pollock Hills, Marrapinti is the site of the nose bone ancestor, thus being a place of ceremony where women camp and fashion nose bone jewellery for ritual use. Marrapinti is also a vital source of bush food and a central focus in Dreamtime stories, which tell of female ancestors stopping at the waterhole to collect water and harvest desert raisins that grow nearby.
Exhibiting since 2000 - both in Australia and overseas - Napanangka has since been acknowledged as a stylistic influence on other Pintupi women painters and has been widely recognised for her collectability by collectors worldwide. A finalist in the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders Art Awards in 2002, Lorna Ward Napanangka’s artistic trajectory is certainly among the most unique and intriguing.
Provenance
Signed on verso: LWN, 2009/6Yanda Aboriginal Art