Debbie Napaljarri Brown Warlpiri, b. 1985
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Debbie Napaljarri BrownWanakiji Jukurrpa (Bush Tomato Dreaming) , 2025acrylic on canvas122 x 30 cm$ 790.00
48 x 11 3/4 inSee more... -
Debbie Napaljarri BrownWanakiji Jukurrpa (Bush Tomato Dreaming)acrylic on linen91 x 91 cm$ 1,900.00
35 7/8 x 35 7/8 in
Everywhen ArtSee more...
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Synergy 2022
First Nations artists from around Australia 29 Aug - 13 Sep 2022FIRST NATIONS ART FROM AROUND AUSTRALIA Xavier Performing Arts Centre, Xavier College Senior Campus, 135 Barkers Road, Kew, 3101 A fundraising exhibition of 46 paintings, barks, ochres, weavings and jewellery...Read more -
WINTER SALON 2022
8 Jul - 9 Aug 2022WARM HUES + WINTER LIGHTS An extensive exhibition of new paintings and sculptures by a wide range of leading artists and rising stars of Aboriginal art from the Central and...Read more -
The Summer Collector's Show 2022
Outstanding Aboriginal Art from around Australia 27 Dec 2021 - 21 Feb 2022Read more -
Synergy: Art from the Heartlands of Aboriginal Australia
Fundraising exhibition in partnership with Xavier College. 1 - 17 Sep 2021FUNDRAISING ONLINE EXHIBITION FOR THE INDIGENOUS LITERACY FOUNDATION. IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE STUDENT COMMITTEE FOR INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS, XAVIER COLLEGE. Paintings and carvings by established and rising star Aboriginal artists from...Read more
Debbie Napaljarri Brown was born in Nyirripi, a remote Aboriginal community 400 kmnorth-west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. She grew up in Nyirrpi, and did most of her schooling there, although she spent several years boarding at Yirrara College in Alice Springs. When she returned to Nyirripi she worked at the store as well as helping to care for old people. In 2010 Debbie moved to Yuendumu, 160 km east of Nyirripi, with her husband and son Jarvis to be closer to her husband’s family. She works for the Women’s Centre, cooking lunches for the kids at school. Debbie has been painting with Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation, an Aboriginal owned and governed art centre located in Yuendumu, since 2006. Her Grandmother, Margaret Napangardi Brown, also an artist with the art centre, taughther to paint. Her Grandfather is the renowned Pintupi artist Pegleg Tjampitjinpa who was born c.1920 and grew up in the vicinity of Wilkinkarra, living a traditional life. Debbie wouldwatch her grandmother and grandfather paint and listen to her Grandmother’s Jukurrpa or Dreaming stories. In her paintings, Debbie paints her father’s Jukurrpa, Dreamings which relate directly to her land, its features, plants and animals. These stories were passed down to her by her Grandmother and her mother and their parents before them for millennia.


