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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Maria Josette Orsto, Kulama, 2007
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Maria Josette Orsto, Kulama, 2007

Maria Josette Orsto Tiwi, b. 29/12/1962

Kulama, 2007
natural ochres on canvas
120 x 90 cm
47 1/4 x 35 3/8 in
MMC2700
AVAILABLE | ENQUIRE HERE
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Visualisation

On a Wall
According to Tiwi belief, the islands were created bu and old blind woman, Mundungkala, who emerged from the ground and moved through the area with her three children, creating the...
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According to Tiwi belief, the islands were created bu and old blind woman, Mundungkala, who emerged from the ground and moved through the area with her three children, creating the familiar features on the land as she went. The land mass itself was created so her children would have a place to live and food to eat. After this time of Parlingarri (creation), Tiwi lived across the islandsin family groups, affiliated with separate areas of country along patrilineal lines. The word Tiwi means simply 'we the people' and has been used to describe the group since contact. The Tiwi word 'Jilamara', which roughly translated to 'design', refers to the intricate ochre patterning traditionally applied to the bodies of dancers and the surface of carved poles during the Pukamani funeral ceremony. This ceremony is still a part of community life and continues to inform the current art practice of the Tiwi people. 
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EVERYWHEN ART, Whistlewood, Bunurong Country
642 Tucks Road, Shoreham, Vic. 3916
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