Kurntikujarra – Jimmy Pike lived in a bush camp on the edge of the remote Great Sandy Desert of North Western Australia where he painted, producing the art for which he has become so well known. Born in 1940, in remote sand hill country near Japirnka, a waterhole in the Great Sandy Desert, Jimmy was a member of the Walmajarri people, one of the last groups to leave the desert and settle on cattle stations in the Kimberley during the 1950’s.
He spent his childhood as a nomad moving with his family, hunting and gathering, around the various waterholes that were the focal points of their arid country. This country, its ancient culture and symbols are the things that inspired Jimmy Pike’s work today. He left the desert as a boy when his family moved to a cattle station in the Kimberley. Like most of his peers, Jimmy decame a stockman.
For many years Jimmy Pike supplemented his earnings by carving and selling artifacts. It wasn’t until 1981 that he was first introduced to Western style painting whilst in prison and discovered his talent for art. A few years later he set up his isolated camp in the desert where he painted. He worked in the open, resting his paintings on a rough work table he made from old planks He stored his art and other materials under a heavy canvas fly, where he also took refuge from the rare seasonal falls of rain.
Jimmy Pike’s paintings of the physical and spiritual quality of his traditional Walmajarri country have added a new dynamism to the central positions of landscape in Australian art. They project a new dimension to our understanding of connections of place and identity. The artist’s themes of the intricacies of desert landscape, the visual character of the changing seasons and the particularities of its Aboriginal spirituality have transformed this extremely isolated area of the northern part of Australia into a tangible experience and a rare encounter with its beauty and sacredness. Jimmy Pike is one of Australia’s most famous Aboriginal artists. He is represented in the collections of all the major Australian public galleries and museums. Jimmy passed away in 2003.
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