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| Japingka Gallery Australia
Japingka Gallery is committed to sourcing the best Indigenous Fine Art works using its vast experience and extensive industry-wide contacts. Japingka Gallery is committed to maintaining a full exhibition program that showcases to a wide audience not only established and highly recognised Indigenous Artists, but also new and emerging talent. This extensive program is conducted fully within the framework of the ART.TRADE Code of Ethics (see below). As such, all works are fully documented and guaranteed with:
* Story associated with the painting
* Artist Biography
* Signed Certificate of Authenticity
Japingka Gallery was formed in 1995 to promote the art and culture of Indigenous Australia. It grew from the work of Desert Designs which began marketing Aboriginal art and designs in 1984. Japingka Gallery is based in an historic two story building in the heart of Fremantle. Three gallery spaces provide over 330 square metres of exhibition space.
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Fremantle 澳大利亚
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地址: 47 High Street |
| 6160 |
| 电话: Tel : International (618) 9335 8265 - Au |
| 传真: Fax : International (618) 9335 8275 - Au |
| 网站:
www.japingka.com.au |
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Lorna Napurrula Fencer
The Spinifex Arts Project
The Wangkatjungka Arts Project
Makinti Napanangka
Ningura Napurrula
Jack Dale
Stumpy Brown
Lily Kelly Napangardi
Billy Whiskey Tjapaltjarri
Ngoia Pollard
Jock Mosquito
Linda Syddick
Gloria Petyarre
and many more
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Japingka’s spring exhibition shifts from the sublime to the light-hearted, from the illuminated canvases of senior Anmatyerre artist, Kudditji Kngwarreye, to Ruth Robertson’s playful depictions of ‘cheeky dogs’ around the Alice Springs town camps.
In Gallery1 Japingka Gallery is showing Anwernekenhe Ayeye – The Story Belonging to Us. This lively, colourful and frequently humorous exhibition tells the stories of some of the artists living in the Town Camps in Alice Springs. They include dogs on trucks or running amok in front yards, desert landscapes and paintings of patchwork blankets that the artists, in their youth, were obliged to make on the missions.
The painters are members of Tangentyere Artists which was established in 2005 and is an Aboriginal owned and directed Art Centre situated in Alice Springs and managed by Tangentyere Council.
Liesl Rockchild, Art Coordinator of Tangentyere Artists, says: “We provide art support to over 400 artists from nineteen Alice Springs Town Camps. These camps are home to around 2000 Indigenous people from both the local area as well as many visitors from remote communities a...[ 阅读全部 ]
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Paintings from the Great Sandy and Central Deserts
Striking ancient desert topography – streaming sandhills, shallow swamps and life-saving waterholes – are the predominant subjects of Japingka’s two new exhibitions.
In Gallery1, in association with Watiyawanu Artists of Amunturrngu, Japingka Gallery presents the distinctive, finely painted graphic works from the Mt Liebig community. Located at the base of Amunturrungu, the original local name for Mt Liebig, this community has become home to renowned artists in a very short time.
Despite its proximity to Papunya Tula, one of the earliest desert art communities, Mt Liebig started to engage in the painting movement only in the early 1990s. It didn’t take long, however, for its talented artists to gain prominence. It was the success in the late ‘90s of Lilly Kelly Napangardi’s elegant and finely detailed sandhills paintings that placed the Watiyawanu artists firmly on the art connoisseurs’ radar.
Since 2000, Wentja Napaltjarri (Shorty Lungkata’s daughter), Lilly Kelly Napangardi and Ngoia Pollard Naplatjarri (winner of the Telstra Art Award in 2006) have be...[ 阅读全部 ]
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Special Event and Exhibition opening
In a break with many years of tradition (and after what has become an institution with art lovers and collectors) of Friday night Exhibition openings, Japingka Gallery is mounting its next major Exhibition of artworks from the extremely remote Spinifex Community on a Saturday afternoon. This reflects the remarkable achievement of the women Artists of Spinifex who will be attending (as finalists) the prestigious WA Indigenous Art Awards at AGWA on the Friday night prior.
The unusual Saturday afternoon opening affords the women the opportunity to attend the official opening of the brand new Spinifex Arts Project Exhibition opening along with several of the men Artists who will also be undertaking the long trip down to Fremantle for the Japingka Gallery opening. This will be a unique opportunity to meet a large group Spinifex Arts Project Artists. Those Artists who will be attending the opening include, Estelle Hogan, Carlene West, Tjaduwa Woods, Simon Hogan, Fred Grant and Byron Brookes.
In conjunction with Spinifex Arts Project, Japingka Gallery is pleased to present exciting new works from...[ 阅读全部 ]
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Paintings from the Great Sandy and Central Deserts
Striking ancient desert topography – streaming sandhills, shallow swamps and life-saving waterholes – are the predominant subjects of Japingka’s two new exhibitions.
In Gallery1, in association with Watiyawanu Artists of Amunturrngu, Japingka Gallery presents the distinctive, finely painted graphic works from the Mt Liebig community. Located at the base of Amunturrungu, the original local name for Mt Liebig, this community has become home to renowned artists in a very short time.
Despite its proximity to Papunya Tula, one of the earliest desert art communities, Mt Liebig started to engage in the painting movement only in the early 1990s. It didn’t take long, however, for its talented artists to gain prominence. It was the success in the late ‘90s of Lilly Kelly Napangardi’s elegant and finely detailed sandhills paintings that placed the Watiyawanu artists firmly on the art connoisseurs’ radar.
Since 2000, Wentja Napaltjarri (Shorty Lungkata’s daughter), Lilly Kelly Napangardi and Ngoia Pollard Naplatjarri (winner of the Telstra Art Award in 2006) have be...[ 阅读全部 ]
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| Directors: Ian Plunkett & David Wroth
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| Open 7 days : Mon- Sat 10am- 5:30pm, Sun 12pm to 5pm
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Copyright 2003-2009 © 萨奇画廊 : 伦敦当代艺术画廊
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