Product details:
ISBN13: | 9781478030782 |
ISBN10: | 147803078X |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | 136 pages |
Size: | 229x152x15 mm |
Weight: | 666 g |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 21 color images |
700 |
Category:
Six Paintings from Papunya ? A Conversation
A Conversation
Publisher: MD ? Duke University Press
Date of Publication: 15 October 2024
Number of Volumes: Trade Paperback
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Short description:
Anthropologist Fred Myers and art critic Terry Smith discuss six Papunya paintings displayed at a 2022 exhibition in New York, drawing on several discourses that have developed around First Nations art, notably anthropology, art history, and curating as practiced by Indigenous and non-Indigenous interpreters.
Long description:
In the early 1970s at Papunya, a remote settlement in the Central Australian desert, a group of Indigenous artists decided to communicate the sacred power of their traditional knowledge to the wider worlds beyond their own. Their exceptional, innovative efforts led to an outburst of creative energy across the continent that gave rise to the contemporary Aboriginal art movement that continues to this day. In their new book, anthropologist Fred Myers and art critic Terry Smith discuss six Papunya paintings featured in a 2022 exhibition in New York. They draw on several discourses that have developed around First Nations art—notably anthropology, art history, and curating as practiced by Indigenous and non-Indigenous interpreters. Their focus on six key paintings enables unusually close and intense insight into the works’ content and extraordinary innovation. Six Paintings from Papunya also includes a reflection by Indigenous curator and scholar Stephen Gilchrist, who considers the nature and significance of this rare transcultural conversation.
“While Fred and Terry appreciate that Indigenous art is in tacit dialogue with dominant approaches to categorization, their conversations work to reduce this determinative power. There is no desire to coax these paintings into familiar and complacent categorizations. On the contrary, they are genuinely responding to the intellectual and cultural challenges of the paintings by shaping a critical vocabulary and methodology that can best apprehend them. . . . They show us the richness of Indigenous cultural practices and the tools with which to apprehend them. Indigenous art and culture deserve nothing less.”—