Barbara Weir Anmatyarre/Alyawarre, b. 1945
54 x 59 1/8 in
She was one of the younger women of the Utopia batik school and in 1994 travelled to Indonesia with the group to work with traditional batik makers. She started painting around 1994 and has since become a highly popular and successful artist, travelling to exhibitions of her work held around Australia and internationally.
All of Weir’s paintings are representations of the once fertile lands of her mother's country at a time when plants, animals and water (including that considered sacred) were plentiful. Themes of her paintings include grass seed, bush berry, wild flowers and Awelye (women’s body design).
Her two main painting themes were those of grass seeds and an encyclopaedic, evolving series entitled My Mother’s Country - the subject of this painting. These finely-crafted paintings depict waterholes, sacred sites, coolamons, digging sticks, spirit figure/creation ancestors and lines of travel, all but obscured under veil-like layers of fine dots.