Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art and Native Title Land Claim
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Dreaming and the Law
The deepest knowledge is abstract—we know it is there, but it cannot be put into words. It cannot be seen, but it is there and contains teachings given by the ancestors, and still carries on down to the present, to contemporary Yolngu society. When old people paint, it is as if they are meditating; it is not just a man painting a design, but the design is a real meaningful and alive totem that somehow communicates with the painter. When a person does a painting it actually increases their knowledge of Yolngu law. There is communication going on.
3. Indigenous Activism—1973 Yirrkala Bark Petition—1988 Barunga Agreement
4. Mabo Drawings—Murray Island Torres Strait—1992 High Court Ruling
The NTA establishes a system for recognising native title, making native title applications, forming native title agreements, and for holding and managing native title rights. Native title rights and interests are unique for each native title holding group, as based in their laws and customs, and reflecting the diversity of Indigenous peoples’ cultural, legal and political traditions. However, native title is not the same as those laws and customs, rather it is the recognition of them. In this recognition, native title brings with it a sweep of intercultural interactions, intricacies and ideologies around the law, Indigenous peoples’ cultures and traditions, and separation thinking and connectivity thinking.
5. 1971 Launch of Desert Acrylic Paintings at Papunya
Papunya was established by the government in the early 1960s as a settlement for tribal Aboriginals, who had been persuaded, cajoled, pressured even forced to abandon their own way of life in the desert and accept the ‘security’, the monotony, and the bleakness of the life in a collection of jerry-built shacks, with few jobs, no opportunities and often only the dole to keep them alive.
Aboriginal tribes were, in effect small nations which had long traditions of complex ‘international’ relations. They made war and peace, negotiated treaties, settled conflicts, arranged marriages and organised access to resources and right of way across territories
When I am gone my grandchildren will be able to understand their culture when they see my [acrylic] paintings. I want whitefellas to respect anangu [Pitjantjatjara people’s] culture. When they see these important paintings, they will know that tjukurpa [Dreaming} is strong, that anangu {Aboriginal peoples] are strong.
6. Ngurrara 1 (1996) and Ngurrara 11 (1997) Canvas—Great Sandy Desert of Western Australia—2007 Federal Court Ruling
far more significant for positioning people in relation to, and because of the landscape. Such land could never be a possession. It is more like family. The relationship is one of care, stewardship. The map of country that it paints is full of people, history, law, stories, connections, allusions and symbolism.
7. Yirrkala Saltwater Bark Collection—Blue Mud Bay—2008 High Court Ruling
By painting these designs we are telling you a story. From time immemorial we have painted just like you use a pencil to write with. Yes, we use our knowledge to paint from the ancient homelands to the bottom of the sea.
These paintings represent the Saltwater Country of the Yolngu. They reveal saltwater in many states, show qualities of depth, surface, and the mix which shroud the secrets: the sacred and often dangerous land just below the surface, the totemic life forms that inhabit these waters and the profound fronts in the deepest waters. The surface depicts the Ancestral Beings—instigators and adventurers in canoes. Their presence and their deeds are also shown as icons that float from clan estate to clan estate, thus connecting people in organised systems of ownership, ceremonies and rights to country. When this connection is established, the giant clouds on the horizon take up the waters, to return as fresh water (rain) over the sea, over the coast, over the land, into the rivers that run to meet the coast, to meet the tides before mixing with the currents to complete the cycle. All the water—both fresh and salt, both in the land and saltwater country is sacred. The movement of these waters is enacted in ritual dance and narrated in the sacred song cycles.
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
Legislation
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1 | Aboriginal laws were encoded in each group’s religious tradition and handed down from generation to generation, by word of mouth. They were a part of the oral tradition, passed on by the guardians of that tradition, who gained access to it as they were initiated. All aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait islanders were familiar with their own laws and with the daily rights and obligations that were imposed on them by these. From early childhood, they learnt what the law allowed and what it forbade. They knew both the spiritual dangers and the punishments that threatened the law-breaker. They witnessed the process by which offenders were punished and the cases argued and decided (Ginibi 1994, p. 8). |
2 | These sacred Dreamings are referred to using different names, dependent on what region of Australia and what specific language group the individual belongs to. |
3 | All Yolngu peoples in northeast Arnhem Land belong to one of two basic divisions or moiety, called Dhuwa and Yirritja. Children belong to the same moiety as their father; their mother belongs to the other moiety. All things in the Yolngu world, including Spirit Beings, clan groups, plant and animal species and areas of land or water, belong to one of the two moieties. The Dhuwa categorisation is given to the Djang’kawu Sisters, the morning star, the water goanna, the stringy bark tree and the land in and around Yirrkala. The Yirritja identity, by contrast, is given to the evening star, stingray, cycad palm and members of the Mangalili clan (Dhimurru Aboriginal Corporation, Yolngu-culture, Dhirurru Website. http://www.dhimurru.com.au/yolngu-cuture.html (accessed on 18 August 2020)). |
4 | Within indigenous traditions, ownership or the entitlement to use lands is often shared amongst individuals. |
5 | The word country is often used to describe indigenous lands. It evokes complex associations, meanings and forms. While one country might have many peoples affiliated with it, one individual might have many countries. A dynamic, multi-interconnected system, the nature of these relationships is negotiated over an individual’s lifetime (Weir 2012, p. 2). Foley and Anderson “explain Australian Aboriginal land rights as a just claim of a long historical movement, driven by Aboriginal voices of resistance to dispossession”, pointing out that “Native Title offers weak form of title to some communities, but the ‘extinguishment’ of claims for the vast majority”. (Foley and Anderson 2006, p. 830). |
6 | The signatories of the Barunga Agreement were the Chief Minister of the Northern Territory, on behalf of the Northern Territory of Australia, the Chair of the Northern Land Council, the Chair of the Anindilyakwa Land Council and the Chair of the Tiwi Land Council. The Barunga Agreement of 1988 was a painted declaration on canvas that referred to the aspirations of the “Indigenous owners and occupiers of Australia”. It was produced by Indigenous leaders in the Northern Territory as a political gesture of self-determination to the Australian Government. Stylistically, it combined both the cross hatched painting form, from Arnhem Land, and the dotted-style painting from the desert (AIATSIS) (Tickner 2001, pp. 40–41). |
7 | This was in respect to Gunditjmara people. See Onus v Alcoa of Australia Ltd (1981) 149 CLR 27 (Weir 2012, p. 13). |
8 | “The Mabo Litigation Records arise from the litigation conducted in both the Supreme Court of Queensland and the High Court of Australia. They comprise a Statement of Facts by the Plaintiffs, wills, land transactions, court transcripts, exhibits, pleadings, applications, witness statements, submissions, correspondence, memoranda and research material. They have been arranged into volumes in broad chronological order. Many of the papers are in copy format, especially the research materials” (National Library of Australia (b)). |
9 | Maps included references to cardinal points, local roads, vegetation, topography, shoreline, beaches, villages, airport and clan lands. |
10 | The presentation of an indigenous native title claim can take over six years to finalise. |
11 | Papunya’s early painters, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri and Kaapa Tjampitjinpa, had worked as artists prior to coming to Papunya, and some men were actively painting with Kaapa Tjampitjinpa at Papunya (Johnson 2010b, pp. 11–43). |
12 | The aboriginal contemporary art movement, from which this practice has its direct origins, is typically traced to Papunya and its art centre in the central desert, in 1971. It was founded on the commercial success of Arnhem land bark paintings in the art market, earlier in the twentieth century (Geissler 2017, 2019, 2021). In Papunya, however, the content and the medium were quite different. Instead of bark painting and ochre, canvas and acrylic were used. The enthusiasm for this movement is due to the local teacher Geoffrey Bardon, and desert artists were motivated to reinvigorate their culture through painting. This resulted in the innovative adaption of traditional imagery in culturally appropriate ways. These new versions of cultural design not only promoted the sophistication of the culture and the individuality of the artists but also new and compelling aesthetic forms and indigenous ideas that would become foundational to shape the identity discourses of the nation (Myers 2002, pp. 5–6, 64, 284, 289; Morphy 1998, pp. 16–20; Anker 2014, p. 160; Smith 1980; McLean 1998, p. 114).Papunya paintings were map-like renderings of Dreaming stories, aerial maps of cultural heritage. They were informed by the pictorial vocabulary of ceremonial body design and ground paintings which, in this new expression, saw their transference from ochres to acrylics and the deployment of graphic symbols that were encoded with multiple meanings. Concentric circles represented sacred rocks, campsites or campfires. U-shapes signified both human and spiritual beings. Wavy lines referred to water and strait lines to ancestral journey or travelling routes. The highpoint of this art occurred in Possum Spirit Dreaming through Napperby Country, the spectacular, map-like canvas covering thousands of kilometres in the desert. It was painted by Clifford Possum and Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri and consisted of multiple Dreaming narratives, namely Possum, Old Man, Yam, Sun and Moon, depicted in one painting (Sutton 1988a, p. 112). |
13 | Determination Area “A” is communally held by the Ngurrara people—the Walmajarri, Mangala, Juwaliny, Wangkajunga and Manjilarra peoples living in and around Fitzroy Crossing. Determination Area “B” was a separate claim. The determination of “A” that was sought covers some 77,810 square kilometres and is located in the vicinity of the Great Sandy Desert, between the southern extent of the Kimberley pastoral leases and the Percival Lakes. This is land from which native peoples had been expelled in the 1950s and 1960s (Mangkaja Arts Resource Agency 2021). |
14 | This innovative evidential framework and meaningful cultural context could not have been reproduced in a conventional courtroom. |
15 | For each there is a transcript in traditional language and English of the traditional stories associated with the Country depicted. |
16 | “This bark painting could be described as portraying the cross sections of the Mangalili Saltwater country. The miny’tji (sacred clan design) represents the saltwater surrounding the ancestral sacred fish spear that was thrown at Yindiwirryun, a sacred rock. This bark shows the turtle Yinipunayi swimming around the base of Yindiwirryun and the Wanupini (storm clouds) gathering on the horizon. The Burrkun, an X shaped configuration on the painting is linked to the ancestral mother Nyapalinu and her characteristics of womanhood and fertility.” Australian National Maritime Museum 2018, ‘Mangalili Yindiwirryun 1998, Djambawa Marawili’, ANMM website, http://collections.anmm.gov.au/objects/14497/mangalili-yindiwirryun?ctx=66ddafbe-fe3f-42d0-947f-a5879d49cf40&idx=0 (accessed on 12 April 2021). |
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Geissler, M. Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art and Native Title Land Claim. Arts 2021, 10, 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts10020032
Geissler M. Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art and Native Title Land Claim. Arts. 2021; 10(2):32. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts10020032
Chicago/Turabian StyleGeissler, Marie. 2021. "Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art and Native Title Land Claim" Arts 10, no. 2: 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts10020032
APA StyleGeissler, M. (2021). Contemporary Indigenous Australian Art and Native Title Land Claim. Arts, 10(2), 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts10020032