Helen Curtis - kapi tjukula - 150 x 100 cm - 23-024
Helen Curtis - kapi tjukula - 150 x 100 cm - 23-024
Artiste : Helen Curtis
Titre de l'œuvre : Kapi tjukula
Format : 150 x 100 cm
Provenance et certificat : centre d'art aborigène de Tjungu Palya
Référence de cette peinture aborigène : 23-024
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Explications de cette peinture Aborigène :
Helen was born in 1973 in Alice Springs hospital over 600kms from her traditional country Cave Hill, near Amata, where she grew up. Cave Hill is the songline of the Seven Sisters' Tjukurpa; an important Dreaming site for the central desert people. Her family moved to Mutjitjulu at Uluru (Ayres Rock) where she worked as a guide for Anangu Tours. She taught visitors about Aboriginal culture and traditional food collection and preparation. Today Helen lives with her mother Angkaliya Curtis at Nyapari Community. Located about 100kms south of Uluru, Nyapari is set at the base of the majestic Mann Ranges in the heart of country traditionally owned by the Pitjantjatjara people.
These ranges known to Anangu as Murputja, likening the mountain to the bony ridge of a person’s spine, are the source of many water holes and traditional camping places. The homelands of Kanpi, Nyapari, Angatja, Umpukulu and Tjankanu have grown from these seasonal camping places into permanent settlements.
This painting deals about kapi tjukula (the deep rockholes) and karu (the creek lines) in my country Cave Hill. This is a sacred place for the Seven Sisters Dreaming. Minyma tjuta (the sisters) are sitting inside the cave, they have been collecting bush tucker, desert rain and bush tomatoes. They wait inside the cave, hiding from the cheeky man Wati Nyiru. This country is from my father.

