Alison Munti Riley Pitjantjatjara, b. 1975
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Alison Munti RileyAra Irititja, Nganampa Ngura, 2019acrylic on canvas83 x 169 cm
32 5/8 x 66 1/2 inSee more... -
Alison Munti RileyNgayuku ngura - My Country, 2016acrylic on linen101.5 x 152.5 cm
40 x 60 1/8 inSee more...
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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 -
The Summer Show 2023 | Grand Design
Contemporary Aboriginal art of high quality and large scale 27 Dec 2022 - 7 Feb 2023The exhibition includes: • One of the last works painted by Kunmanara (Pepai) Jangala Carroll, the only painting still owned by the estate of the artist at Ernabella Arts and...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 2021
Outstanding Aboriginal art from 9 regions 27 Dec 2020 - 23 Feb 2021Read more -
The Colour Purple
A celebration of Aboriginal women's art 7 Mar - 2 Apr 2019In celebration of International Women's Day, Alice Walker's book and subsequent movie, the suffragette movement and all First Nations women, The Colour Purple features a wide variety of works by...Read more -
From Nature
Spring Salon 2017 23 Sep - 30 Oct 2017Discover the connection between art and nature this spring at Whistlewood Gallery. Our Spring Salon exhibition, From Nature, features Aboriginal and select contemporary Australian art selected for its celebration of...Read more -
Inheritance
Showing, teaching, passing down... 30 Sep - 23 Oct 2016McCulloch & McCulloch/ Salt Contemporary Art, Queenscliff An exhibition of new Aboriginal art from the APY Lands, the Kimberley, the Central, Western & Eastern Deserts, the Pilbara and Arnhem Land...Read more -
Autumn Salon + Easter Art Parade 2014
19 - 22 Apr 2014An exhibition of vibrant new works from the APY Lands, Utopia, Ampilatwatja, East Arnhem Land, the Kimberley. With informative Art Parade of 70 + worksRead more -
Spring Salon 2013
13 - 21 Oct 2012A private view exhibition of vibrant new works by some of Australia’s most exciting Aboriginal artists. Our recent northern trips have included to the Top End regions of Daly River,...Read more
Alison Munti Riley was born c 1975 and is a leading mid generation artist of the APY Lands. She grew up at Pukatja (Ernabella) , and lived there until 1990 when her family moved to Amata, another community in the APY Lands. She learned to paint and make batik at school at Ernabella and then with Ernabella Arts and continued her artistic career from the mid 2000s at Tjala Arts while living at Amata.
Her work developed in fluency and vitality as she developed her already well honed artistic skills while working with Tjala Arts and became noted for its glowing colours and impressive design, quickly becoming highly sought after when shown in leading galleries around Australia. Around 2013 she returned to her birth place of Ernabella where she continues to paint with Ernabella Arts.
Established in 1948, Ernabella is the oldest art centre in Australia and is well known for representing thework of painters, ceramicists, weavers and batik makers of top quality.
For the last several years Alison has chosen as her subject matter for many of her paintings, the country that she remembers so well as a child in its 'olden days’ - the lush state it was in before the invasion of therenowned buffle grass which has spread throughout much of Australia’s interior, overtaking native grasses and leading to the vast reduction in native fauna and other flora as the result. Occasionally she will include subtle depictions of animals such as the perentie lizard (one of the main dreaming stories of her Pitjantjatjara people) in her work to reinforce the interconnectedness of creation stories, their lands, the plants and the wildlife. As such, her paintings of this subject form a gentle environmental commentary while simultaneously representing an inherent dreaming stories.
Combined with the fine aesthetic for which her work is noted, this narrative gives her work a unique resonance and depth. In 2012 Alison was a finalist in the leading Aboriginal art award, the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award and she won the People’s Choice award of that award the same year.
Her work has been included regularly in the annual Desert Mob exhibition of work by art centres in Alice Springs and been singled out for praise by reviewers of that exhibition.
Her work is included in the collections of the Art Gallery of South Australia and Queensland Art Gallery and is in the collections of a number of leading private collectors around Australia.


