In Australia, from the 1970s, incredibly innovative paintings, the masterpieces of desert artists, appeared. The world discovered these amazing artists, old cowboys, 8o-year-old women, who painted exceptional works, without having ever received training in Western plastic techniques. They had appropriated new materials, such as acrylic paint and canvas, and created an instantly recognizable style. Before our eyes, in the deserts and savannahs of the continent furthest away from Europe, was born a major artistic movement. An art that exists nowhere else. The painting of the desert does not correspond to the codes and canons of the art labeled "primitive" or "first". She evokes the formalistic researches of the Western vanguard. This book giv...
The translation of traditional Western Desert iconography, narrative conventions and ceremonial aest...
This thesis explores the forces that brought two vast collaborative paintings known as Ngurrara Canv...
A mere twenty years ago most people thought of contemporary Australian Aboriginal arts and crafts as...
Remote Aboriginal painting earned a place in the contemporary global art world without any debts to ...
The interest in Aboriginal art in Europe and in the whole Western world has grown exponentially sinc...
Art of the Western Desert Fine Arts Gallery, University Centre 4-23 September 1978. Artists from ...
The period from the formation of Papunya Tula Artists to the inclusion of Papunya artists’ work in t...
An exhibition titled "Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert" featuring paintings by the Pintupi people...
Exhibition featuring Aboriginal art held by the Fine Arts Committee, University of Tasmania at the F...
The most fabulous moment in Australian art history occurred in the autumn of 1971 when an art teache...
Painting from the desert : contemporary Aboriginal paintings Catalogue of exhibition held at Plimso...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
This article brings together existing research as well as new data to examine the shift in the recep...
The translation of traditional Western Desert iconography, narrative conventions and ceremonial aest...
This thesis explores the forces that brought two vast collaborative paintings known as Ngurrara Canv...
A mere twenty years ago most people thought of contemporary Australian Aboriginal arts and crafts as...
Remote Aboriginal painting earned a place in the contemporary global art world without any debts to ...
The interest in Aboriginal art in Europe and in the whole Western world has grown exponentially sinc...
Art of the Western Desert Fine Arts Gallery, University Centre 4-23 September 1978. Artists from ...
The period from the formation of Papunya Tula Artists to the inclusion of Papunya artists’ work in t...
An exhibition titled "Papunya Painting: Out of the Desert" featuring paintings by the Pintupi people...
Exhibition featuring Aboriginal art held by the Fine Arts Committee, University of Tasmania at the F...
The most fabulous moment in Australian art history occurred in the autumn of 1971 when an art teache...
Painting from the desert : contemporary Aboriginal paintings Catalogue of exhibition held at Plimso...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
"This research project explores the possibility of a relationship between Abstract art and Aborigina...
This article brings together existing research as well as new data to examine the shift in the recep...
The translation of traditional Western Desert iconography, narrative conventions and ceremonial aest...
This thesis explores the forces that brought two vast collaborative paintings known as Ngurrara Canv...
A mere twenty years ago most people thought of contemporary Australian Aboriginal arts and crafts as...