Barbara Weir Anmatyarre/Alyawarre, b. 1945
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WEST MEETS EAST
6 - 24 Apr 2023This two part exhibition features works from the gallery and studio of the Kimberley's Red Rock Art run from 1997 to 2016 by Kevin and Jenny Kelly. Plus colourful acrylics...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 -
Summer Collector's Show 2021
Outstanding Aboriginal art from 9 regions 27 Dec 2020 - 23 Feb 2021Read more -
In Black + White
10 Jul - 4 Aug 2020Read 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 -
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 -
Spring Salon + Art Parade
24 Sep - 4 Oct 2016An exhibition of dynamic new Aboriginal art celebrating the vibrancy of spring in paintints, ochres, barks and carvings from the Central, Western and Eastern Deserts, Utopia, the Pilbara, the APY...Read more -
Living the Land
30 Oct - 14 Nov 2010Coolart Wetlands & Homestead, Somers, Victoria on Saturday Oct 30-Nov 14, 2010. Featuring 70+ works from around Australia by leading artists including Ningura Napurrula, Ronnie Tjampitjinpa, Billy Missi, Jack Britten,...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
Born around 1945, Barbara Weir’s mother was Minnie Pwerle and her father Jack Weir, the white lessee of a cattle station adjoining her mother’s country. Barbara Weir had a unique relationship with Emily Kame Kngwarreye who was her main carer as a child before she was removed from her home by the Native Welfare Patrol at the age of nine. After years of living with various families and attending schools all over Australia, not remembering the origin of her birthplace, she rediscovered it after some years of searching in the 1960s. The first person she met on her return to Utopia was her cousin, artist Kathleen Petyarre. It took Weir some years to relearn the language and to re-establish a relationship with her mother, during which time she again became extremely close to Emily Kngwarreye. By the 1980s, Weir had become a fluent Anmatyerre and Alyawarre speaker, the first female member of the Aboriginal Land Council and had been instrumental in the Utopia people’s successful land rights claim in 1975. In 1985 she was the first woman president of the region’s Urapuntja Council.
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 are those of grass seeds and an encyclopaedic, evolving series entitled My Mother’s Country. 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. Recent works have seen Barbara incorporate ash from her country in her paint, resulting in some incredible textures and subtle hues in her work. Barbara Weir's exhibition history is extensive, and anyone who has the pleasure of spending time with Barbara will hear of her vast travels throughout America, Europe and Asia to paint and exhibit her work. As Barbara enters her 70s, she shows no signs of slowing down and continues a considerable travel and exhibition schedule. She remains a great inspiration to those around her. In January 2009, Barbara was listed in the top 50 of Australia's most collectable artists in


