Gurrundul #1 Marawili Yolngu, b. 1964

Works
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2023
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2023
    earth pigments on stringybark
    130.5 x 60 cm
    51 3/8 x 23 5/8 in
    Sold
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu , 2023
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu , 2023
    earth pigments on stringybark
    133 x 73 cm
    52 3/8 x 28 3/4 in
    Sold
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2023
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2023
    earth pigments on stringybark
    106 x 57 cm
    41 3/4 x 22 1/2 in
    $ 3,600.00
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2023
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2023
    earth pigment on board
    122 x 80 cm
    48 x 31 1/2 in
    Sold
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2023
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2023
    earth pigments on stringybark
    131 x 54 cm
    51 5/8 x 21 1/4 in
    $ 4,700.00
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2022
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2022
    earth pigments on stringybark
    132 x 55 cm
    52 x 21 5/8 in
    Sold
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Lulumu, 2021
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Lulumu, 2021
    earth pigments on board

    122.5 x 74 cm
    48 1/4 x 29 1/8 in
    Sold
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Ṉäḏi ga Guṉdirr (Meat ants and Termite mounds) Gurrundul, 2021
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Ṉäḏi ga Guṉdirr (Meat ants and Termite mounds) Gurrundul, 2021
    earth pigments and sand on stringybark
    109 x 40 cm
    42 7/8 x 15 3/4 in
    $ 4,200.00
  • Gurrundul #1 Marawili, Gurrtjpi, 2020
    Gurrundul #1 Marawili
    Gurrtjpi, 2020
    ochres on bark
    83 x 67 cm
    32 5/8 x 26 3/8 in
    Sold
Exhibitions
Biography

A daughter of leading Yolngu bark painter the late Mulkun Wirrpanda, sister of Djambawa Marawili and wife to Wanyubi Marika, Gurrundul Marawili has been making art since 2007. 

Of equal importance is her work as an ecologist with Yirralka Rangers. This work has, to some degree, interrupted her painting career - while working on and with Country has continually informed her art with richness and depth. 

She exhibited first at Annandale Galleries, Sydney in a successful exhibition in conjunction with her sister Yalmakany Marawili in 2009 and again in 2010. Her work was subsequently included in group exhibitions at Buku-Larrnggay Mulka's representative galleries. 

Gurrundul and Yalmakany also worked alongside their mother Mrs M Wirrpanda recording endangered and significant plants of the Blue Mud Country for the wide-ranging project Djalkiri: We are standing on their lands, which brought together leading Yolngu and other Australian artists and resulted in a national three-year touring exhibition. This was followed by another significant project Midawarr:Harvest: the art of Mulkun Wirrpanda and John Wolseley. Commissioned by the National Museum of Australia this also resulted in a large nationally-touring public gallery exhibition. 

Gurrundul's barks and larrakitj frequently depict Lulumu (the stingray) and its sites around her Yilpara homelands on the shores of Blue Mud Bay, Bark and Larrakitj depicting Yilpara stingray sites and Madarrpa themes. 

Gurrundul Marawili's first solo exhibition was held at Everywhen Art, Whistlewood, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria in March 2024.