Lorna Fencer Napurrula Paintings
Lorna Fencer Napurrula - Lajamanu artist paints Yam Dreamings and related ceremonial stories.
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About Lorna Fencer Napurrula
Date of Birth
c.1920 – 7 Dec 2006
Place of Birth
Near Chila Well, Northern Territory
Language
Warlpiri
Community
Lajamanu, NT
Career
Acknowledged as one of the great innovators of the Warlpiri art movement from Lajamanu, Lorna Napurrula Fencer was both a fierce and gentle custodian of her culture. She painted the great Napurrula-Nakamarra creation stories from her brother’s custodial site at Yurmurrpa. These ceremonial stories re-enact the myths of the Ancestors who dug out the first yarla, or bush potato, from the earth around the underground water source at Yurmurrpa.
Embedded in the swirling shapes of the bush potato leaves are the “U” shapes of the Napurrula and Nakamarra women, who remain the custodians and the beneficiaries of their great Ancestors’ achievements. The travels of Napurrula and Nakamarrra kinship or skin groups are the inspiration for Lorna Fencer Napurrula’s work, and she was a custodian of the Dreamings associated with bush potato (yarla), caterpillar (luju), bush onion, yam, bush tomato, bush plum, many different seeds, and (importantly) water.
Lorna Napurrula Fencer was a senior Warlpiri artist, born at Yartulu Yartulu, and custodian of inherited lands of Yumurrpa in the Tanami Desert. In 1949 many Warlpiri people, including Lorna Napurrula Fencer were forcibly moved from Yuendumu community by the government, to go a settlement at Lajamanu 250 miles north in the country of the Gurindji people. Napurrula managed to maintain and strengthen her cultural commitment through ceremonial activity and art, and asserted her position as a prominent elder figure in the community. Lorna Napurrula Fencer began her painting in the mid 1980s.
Lorna Napurrula Fencer at her best is recognised as an artist who was a master of colour, carefully considering the impact as she laid down the paint on the canvas. Her large epic canvases created in the eighth decade of her life were final and compelling statements about the power of the great Warlpiri stories that she painted for over twenty years.
Lorna’s mother’s country was Yumurrpa. This is where the Yarla (Yam or Big Bush Potato) Dreaming track begins on its travels north toward Lajamanu. Her father’s country was Wapurtali, home of the little bush potato. Before she began painting on canvas in the mid 1980s, Lorna Napurrula Fencer painted on traditional women’s coolamons and digging sticks.
Lorna Napurrula Fencer is represented in the Australian National Gallery and National Gallery of Victoria, in State Galleries and major private collections. In 2011 a major touring survey exhibition titled ‘Yulyurlu – Lorna Napurrula Fencer’ travelled around Australian institutional galleries.
Aboriginal Art Status
Iconic artist
Collections
Hank Ebes Collection, Melbourne
Aboriginal Art Museum, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Artbank, Sydney
Australian Heritage Commission Collection, Canberra
Christensen Collection, held by Museum of Victoria, Melbourne
Gantner Myer Collection of Aboriginal Art
Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Gold Coast
Holmes a Court Collection, Perth
Kerry Stokes Collection, Perth
Laverty Collection, Sydney
Leewuin Estate, Perth
Margaret Carnegie Collection
Museum and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory, Darwin
Museum of Victoria, Melbourne
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Shepparton Art Museum, Shepparton VIC
Fondation Burkhardt-Felder Arts et Culture, Motiers, Switzerland
Awards
2007 Top 50 Collectable Artists, Australian Art Collector Magazine
2004 21st NATSIAA, Darwin – Finalist
2000 17th NATSIAA, Darwin – Finalist
1998 John McCaughey Memorial Art Prize, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
1997 Gold Coast City Art Award, Conrad Jupiters Casino, Gold Coast
Selected Exhibitions
1991 Aboriginal Art, Australian Embassy, Washington USA
1991 Paint Up Big: Warlpiri Women’s Art from Lajamanu, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne VIC
1991 Aboriginal Art and Spirituality, High Court of Australia, Canberra ACT
1994 Yapakurlangu Wirrkardu, Batchelor College, Tennant Creek NT
1996 All About Art, Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne VIC
1997 Women’s Body Paint, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne VIC
1997 Recent Acquisitions, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne VIC
1997 Me Warlpiri, Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne VIC
1997/8 John McCaughey Memorial Art Prize, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne VIC
1998 Australian Heritage Commission, Canberra ACT
1998 Yulyulu, Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne VIC
1998 6th Australian Contemporary Art Fair, Exhibition Building, Melbourne VIC
1998 Warnayaka Warlpiri, Karen Brown Gallery, Darwin NT
1988 People, Place and Art, Hilton International Hotel, Adelaide SA
1998 Wild Warlpiri Women, Coo-ee Aboriginal Art Gallery, Sydney NSW
1999 Paintings from Lajamanu Community, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
1999 Brit’s Art & Promotion, Jülich, Gondwana Gallerie, Rome Italy
1999 Tjinyipjila-Australian Message, Washington USA
1999 Love, Magic, Erotics & Politics in Indigenours Art, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney
1999 Indigenious Art of the Dreamtime, United Nations Buildings, New York USA
2000 Brit’s Art & Promotion, Jülich, Germany; Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum, Köln; UFA-Factory, Berlin
2000 Expo 2000, Australian Pavilion, Hannover
2000 Australian Night in Berlin
2000 Artists of Lajamanu, Tanami Desert, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2000 Indigenous Artists Exhibition, Yuwayi Gallery, Sydney, NSW
2001 Brit’s Art & Promotion, Düsseldorf; State Museum for Nature and Man, Oldenburg; Quellenhof- Dorint Hotel, Aachen, Germany
2001 Little Gems, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2002 Jinta Jungu – Museum for Natural History, Humbold-University, Berlin, Germany
2002 Art & Communication, Vodafone – Ratingen
2002 Lorna Napurrula Fencer – Powerful New Paintings from the Tanami Desert, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2002 Lorna Napurrula Fencer – The Big Picture, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne VIC
2002 Lorna Fencer – Inner Spring – New Works from the Tanami
2003 Serenitiy – Past and Present, Walsrode
2003 Lorna Napurrula Fencer, Chapman Galleries, Canberra ACT
2003 Lorna Napurrula Fencer – Paintings 2003, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne VIC
2003 Lorna Napurrula Fencer –New Paintings, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2003 Big Country (Group Exhibition) – Gallery Gondwana, Alice Springs NT – Mary Place Gallery, Sydney NSW
2004 Divas of the Desert Gallery Gondwana, Alice Springs NT
2004 Big Country, Gallery Gondwana, Alice Springs NT
2004 Yumurlpa, Gow Langsford Gallery, Sydney NSW
2004 Telstra Awards – Finalist, Darwin NT
2005 Lorna Napurrula Fencer, Hogarth Galleries, Sydney NSW
2005 Divas of the Desert, Gallery Gondwana, Alice Springs NT
2005 Lorna Napurrula Fencer- Yumurrpa – Paintings 2005, Vivien Anderson Gallery, Melbourne VIC
2006 Luminaries of the Desert, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2007 Lorna Napurrula Fencer – A Tribute, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2008 Women’s Law, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2011 Yulyurlu: Lorna Fencer Napurrula, Australian National University, Drill Hall Gallery, Canberra ACT
2012 Heirs and Successors, Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
2012 The Colourists: Kudditji Kngwarreye & Lorna Napurrula Fencer , Japingka Gallery, Fremantle WA
Read More
The Colourists: Kudditji Kngwarreye & Lorna Napurrula Fencer
The Yam Dreaming of Lorna Napurrula Fencer
The Art of Lorna Napurrula Fencer (c1925 – 2006)
Lorna Fencer and Yam Dreaming – An Interview with Didier Zanette
Links
National Gallery of Victoria
Art Gallery of Western Australia
RMIT Gallery
YouTube – Lorna Fencer Napurrula