Emily Pwerle Anmatyerre and Alyawarr, b. c.1922
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Emily PwerleAwelye Atnwengerrp, 2011acrylic on linen canvas79 x 60 cm$ 2,400.00
31 1/8 x 23 5/8 inSee more...
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H O M E
Opening exhibition of Everywhen Art at Whistlewood 6 Jan - 25 Feb 2024The exhibition H O M E launches the new home of Everywhen Art at Whistlewood - the McCulloch family's historic house gallery on the Mornington Peninsula. This richly explorative exhibition...Read more -
For the Elders
29 Jun - 17 Jul 2023An exhibition in celebration of the theme of NAIDOC Week 2023 with barks, works on paper and paintings in ochre and acrylic by senior artists from Arnhem Land, Mornington Island,...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 -
New Utopia
Leading and next gen artists from Utopia 6 - 26 Apr 2022Exhibiting artists: Ada Pula Beasley, Barbara Weir, Belinda Golder Kngwarreye, Bernadine Kemarre, Caroline Petrick Ngwarreye, Charmaine Pwerle, Emily Pwerle, Esther Haywood Petyarre, Janet Golder Kngwarreye, Katie Rumble Petyarre, Jeannie Mills...Read 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 -
Winter Salon 2021
Warm Hues + Winter Lights 4 Jun - 30 Aug 2021Warm hues and winter lights feature in a wide-ranging exhibition of Aboriginal art from around Australia. Included are works by 2021 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award...Read more -
Summer Collector's Show 2020
27 Dec 2019 - 25 Feb 2020Outstanding Aboriginal art from the Central, Western and Eastern Deserts, Far North Queensland, the APY Lands, Utopia, the Pilbara, the Kimberley, Tiwi Islands, Arnhem Land and the Mornington Peninsula plus...Read more -
Christmas Salon + Art Parade
7 - 22 Dec 2019Aboriginal art + gifts for ChristmasRead more -
Colours of My Country
Opening summer exhibition Everywhen Artspace 5 Jan - 28 Feb 2019Opening exhibition Everywhen Artspace. New Aboriginal art from the Central, Western & Eastern deserts, Far North Queensland, the APY Lands, Utopia, the Pilbara, the Kimberley, Tiwi Islands, Arnhem Land and...Read more -
20/20 A Sense of Place
7 Jan - 5 Feb 2017An expansive new exhibition of the work of more than 50 leading Australian landscape artists from the Mornington Peninsula, Vic, Qld, NSW, WA, NT, the APY Lands, the Pilbara, the...Read more -
Utopia Colour
11 - 30 Jun 2010An exhibition of vibrant Eastern Desert paintings by Minnie Pwerle, Molly Pwerle, Emily Pwerle, Galya Pwerle, Barbara Weir, Gloria Petyarre, Freddy Pwerle & Katie Morgan. Curated by McCulloch & McCulloch...Read more -
The Summer Show
16 - 30 Jan 2010Celebrating the colours of summer, this new exhibition showcases art from Australia’s newest and most dynamic desert art producing regions. Including work from the APY Lands, Western Desert, Spinifex Country,...Read more -
McCulloch's Aboriginal Art @ Salt Contemporary
A decade of Australia’s Indigenous fine art 1999-2009 6 - 19 Jun 2009Curated by McCulloch & McCulloch June 6-19 2009 Salt Contemporary ArtRead more
Emily Pwerleʼs country is Atnwengerrp and her language is Anmatyerre and Alyawarr. She is in her late 80s, possibly born in 1922 (no records exist) and lives in Irrultja, a tiny settlement in Utopia of about 100 people.
She has had little exposure to western culture and only picked up a paintbrush for the first time in 2004. Sister of the late Minnie Pwerle, Emily Pwerleʼs extended family are all artists: Barbara Weir, Aileen and Betty Mpetyane. She started painting professionally with her sisters Galya and Molly in collaboration with Minnie Pwerle. The sisters had an instant response to applying paint onto canvas, developing expressions of their dreamings that have been passed down from generation to generation.
Pwerle paints ʻAwelye Atnwengerrpʼ, meaning womenʼs ceremony, which is depicted by a series of lines and symbols, often criss-crossed patterns that are layered across the canvas with colours that are explosive, colourful and energetic.
The patterns represent the designs painted on women's bodies during bush tucker ceremonies in Atnwengerrp. Her breast designs, with their straight lined patterns and beautiful use of colour, may superficially remind one of Minnie Pwerleʼs well-known paintings, yet Emily Pwerleʼs are different again. In her works, the body painting designs are dense, they jostle for space, almost fighting their way across the canvas, as though they were about to break from their rectangular restraints and explode forth in a riot of colour and pattern.


