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Born:
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c.
1941 |
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People:
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Rembarrnga |
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Language:
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Rembarrnga |
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Area:
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Beswick,
N.T. |
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Paddy Fordham Wainburranga’s paintings and carved
Balangjarngalain spirit figures are without parallel. The loose fluidity
of line and form - in two or three dimensions - defies standard conventions.
The borders of his paintings on bark and canvas are often crooked,
the paint rough and unfinished but an impressive, gestural power dominates
each painting. The spirit carvings, unlike the more static mimi figures
of the Kurdal, are fluid, waving and suggest movement. Even the artist’s
hollow log coffins are marked by potent imagery and spontaneous paint
quality.
Paddy Fordham Wainburranga works with a raucous vigour
on a plain background, painting vital spirit figures, writhing serpents,
circles and dots without concern for symmetry, precision or minute
elaboration.
Although
Paddy Fordham Wainburranga was taught to paint by his father, his
art has branched in another direction and is not confined to the iconography
of ritual and mythology. As a result of a lack of ceremonial status,
the artist is not entitled to include country-defining symbolism or
rarrk used by other Rembarrnga people. Paddy Fordham Wainburranga
was displaced from his birth place Bamdibu ( south west of Ramingining
) to Beswick Station, 100 km south east of Katherine.
The Rembarrnga language group from Central Arnhem Land
has produced some highly original art practitioners over the years,
however, none has matched the thematic inventiveness of Paddy Fordham
Wainburranga. As a painter with a philosophical bent of mind, Wainburranga
paints Ngalkbun Rembarrnga mythologies but also dedicates himself
to recording the history of the region through a remarkable series
of works produced since the eighties.
Wainburranga’s personal experiences which shaped
his rather eclectic views on life, were similar in many respects to
those of other men from his generation. Born in his father’s country
at Bandibu, between Malnjangarnak and Bulman, Paddy and his family
followed many of the other Rembarrnga to the ration Depot at Maranboy
during the wartime. It was later, after limited schooling at the nearby
Government settlement Dandangle,
that Wainburranga decided to become a stockman, working at various
cattle stations from Mataranka to VRD, Killarney and Gorrie Station,
then moving to Oenpelli, Goulburn Island and Milingimbi. By 1962 after
the introduction of citizenship rights for Aboriginals, he decided
to give up being a stockman and went to the recently established settlement
of Maningrida to live. Nearly twenty years later he returned to live
with his Rembarrnga relations at Beswick. It was here in the early
1980s that Wainburranga began committing his stories to bark.
Paddy Fordham Wainburranga is included in the collections
of the National Gallery Canberra, National Gallery of Northern Territory,
Jinta Desert Art Gallery, Aboriginal Desert Art Gallery Alice Springs,
Aboriginal Art Galleries of Australia Melbourne and many other public
and private collections round the world. In 1993 wainburranga’s painting
Eagle Hawk and Crow won the National Aboriginal art award. When asked
if he would ever give up painting if he became wealthy he replied:
“No, painting won’t stop. no, I gotta do that. My painting, my
Dreamtime, nobody own it for me, nobody can stop this History painting.
When I die, young people gotta take it over. That’s why all over the
world we meet up, talk together and give history to one another. I
give you my painting or you give me your painting. Everything for
the children because they going to be taking over.”
Paddy further advanced his painting skills from natural
ochre pigment on bark to high quality acrylic paints on Linen or Canvas.
He has been able to maintain his unique style without compromising
his traditional iconography.
Paddys unique depiction of the Mimi Spirit is the centre
piece for most of his paintings. He often paints a dancing Mimi Man,
which he says is a good Mimi, he looks over the land as a protector,
and only comes out at nights. The Mimi is not visible during the day.
Paddy always includes some small representation of the
bush animals that he grew up with, many of these animals are the focal
point of significant stories that were passed to him by his father.
Animals such as the long and short neck turtles, file snakes, leeches,
butterflies, rainbow searpent, (Bolong) and of course the mosquito
which is paddy’s totem and are often seen accompanying the Mimi figures
which Paddy depicts in his artwork.
Paddy is very loyal to his tradition always encouraging
younger people to paint so as to record their history and culture
in art for future generations. Paddy can often be heard singing his
tribal songs while he is painting.
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