Born around 1969, west of Lake Mackay just inside the West Australian border. Walala Tjapaltjarri was one of the first of nine Pintubi men to make contact with non-Aboriginal people. They walked out of the desert in 1984 into the small Kiwirrkura community.
Walala was first introduced to painting by one of his older brothers Warlimpirrnga, also a painter of international acclaim. Within three years Walala, Warlimpirrnga and Thomas were painting for the renowned Papunya Tula Artists cooperative.
The Tingari ancestors, men and women, travelled great distances across the land laying down a body of ceremonies and other law and creating sacred sites. It is their law that has formed the basis of higher education, after initiation, for the young men.
The Pintubi men tell the stories of the Tingari circle using simple, geometric and bold forms. Walala has mastered this relaxed and simplified way of painting, however his representation of these ‘dreamings’ is very distinctive. He began abstracting the traditional Pintubi designs, creating striking works with bold rectangled blocks of colour.
Walala’s innovative style has resulted in quite a following, recognised both nationally and internationally. His works are highly sought after worldwide.
AIAM 200 references:
Walala Tjapaltjarri, brother of well-known painters Warlimpirrnga and Thomas Tjapaltjarri, was born in the Gibson Desert east of Kiwirrkura in the early 1960’s. He was one of a small party, that included his brothers, several sisters, and two old aunts whose arrival in Kiwirrkura in 1984 made international headlines that proclaimed the discovery of a ‘Lost Tribe’. Until this time, at age 21, Walala had never encountered Europeans and their ways. The group had been following their traditional lifestyle in the country west of Lake Mackay.
In 1990 Walala lived in Kiwirrkura and watched in admiration and respect as his brother Warlimpirrnga began to paint. He had taken to accompanying his brother on trips to Alice Springs from 1986 onward and it was on one of these trips that Walala himself was offered small boards, and was encouraged by his brother to paint. While Warlimpirrnga instructed Walala in the use of paints and canvas, from the outset he was seen to possess a bold and strikingly individual style. He took to painting with the assuredness of a young man firmly grounded in his culture and intimately familiar with the sites he depicted. His subject from the outset was that of the Tingari cycle, a series of sacred and secret men’s mythological song cycles associated with a number of related sites in his country including Marua, Minatarnpi and Mina Mina in the Gibson Desert of Western Australia.
Having developed his style during the early 1990’s Walala produced a work on canvas in 1997 that was unlike anything he had done before. Strongly gestural and boldly graphic it featured roundels, rectangles and abutting lines set against a stark monochrome black background. This was the distinctive and individual style that laid the foundation for the remarkable body of work that he has completed since that time.
All three brothers as well as Dr. George Tjapaltjarri, the old medicine man who had put them through the ‘law’, began painting for Gallery Gondwana during the late 1990’s.This was due in large part to the personal relationship they shared with Gallery Gondwana Manager Brice Ponsford, who had worked for Papunya Tula in Kiwirrkura when the brothers had first arrived in the community a decade earlier. By 1999 Dr. George painted less and less frequently as his eyesight began to fail, and Walala, preferring his independence, lived in Alice Springs and Katherine where he painted for a number of independent dealers. Warlimpirrnga however, tired of life too far from his family and homeland, returned to paint principally for the art centre other than on his infrequent travels during which he painted for others. Amongst the female members of the group that left the desert with them Yukultji, Yalti and Takarria Napangati all became painters working with Papunya Tula.
Walala’s first solo shows were held with Gallery Gondwana in Alice Springs, which was the gallery that encouraged and first presented his art. Following his 1998 solo exhibition at Coo-ee Aboriginal Art Gallery in Sydney, SMH art critic John McDonald enthusiastically endorsed his work and it appeared he was headed for a stellar career. However since that time Walala has become a nomadic and independent artist and this has seemed at times to mitigate against the collectability of his work. Nevertheless his success prior to 2002 was followed by his participation in a number of important exhibitions most notably at Fireworks Gallery in Brisbane where he had the opportunity to engage with international artists in the production of experimental modernist paintings and sculptures, and with Art d’Australie in Paris.
Profile References
Isaacs, Jennifer. 1999. Spirit Country, Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art. Victoria. Hardie Grant Books.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/features/whatever-happened-to-the-pintupi-nine/story-e6frg8h6-1227099475063
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