Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 12
George Ward TjungurrayiAboriginal Painting by George Ward Tjungurrayi2014
2014
$5,500List Price
About the Item
- Creator:George Ward Tjungurrayi (1945, Aboriginal Australian)
- Creation Year:2014
- Dimensions:Height: 47.25 in (120 cm)Width: 35.44 in (90 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Miami, FL
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU13612675272
About the Seller
5.0
Vetted Professional Seller
Every seller passes strict standards for authenticity and reliability
Established in 2011
1stDibs seller since 2012
75 sales on 1stDibs
Authenticity Guarantee
In the unlikely event there’s an issue with an item’s authenticity, contact us within 1 year for a full refund. DetailsMoney-Back Guarantee
If your item is not as described, is damaged in transit, or does not arrive, contact us within 7 days for a full refund. Details24-Hour Cancellation
You have a 24-hour grace period in which to reconsider your purchase, with no questions asked.Vetted Professional Sellers
Our world-class sellers must adhere to strict standards for service and quality, maintaining the integrity of our listings.Price-Match Guarantee
If you find that a seller listed the same item for a lower price elsewhere, we’ll match it.Trusted Global Delivery
Our best-in-class carrier network provides specialized shipping options worldwide, including custom delivery.You May Also Like
Small Square Abstract Canvas Art Study of Red Poppy Field by Contemporary Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Small Square Abstract Landscape Canvas Art Study of Red Poppy Field by Contemporary Artist, Angela Wakefield
Art measures 6 x 6 inches
Frame measures 11 x 11 inches
Angela Wakefiel...
Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic, Board
$983 Sale Price
20% Off
H 11 in W 11 in D 2 in
Abstract Landscape Miniature Painting Study by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Abstract Landscape Miniature Painting Study by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield
Art measures 8 x 8 inches
Frame measures 13 x 13 inches
This painting is an abstract...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Acrylic, Board, Foam Board
$1,365 Sale Price
25% Off
H 13 in W 13 in D 2 in
Pink
Blue Abstract Impressionist Painting by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Abstract Impressionist Painting by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. This atmospheric painting depicts an imagined scene using muted pink & blue pastel colours. This uni...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
$8,685 Sale Price
20% Off
H 18 in W 22 in D 2.5 in
Sunset at Brora Golf Course in the Scottish Highlands by Contemporary Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Sunset at Brora Golf Course in the Scottish Highlands by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. This unique original depicts a deep red orange sunset on the east coast of Sco...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic, Board
$3,769 Sale Price
20% Off
H 16 in W 18 in D 2 in
Landscape Seascape of Beautiful Remote Sandy Beach on the East Coast of Scotland
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Landscape Seascape of Beautiful Remote Sandy Beach on the East Coast of Scotland by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield.
Art measures 20 ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
$9,778 Sale Price
20% Off
H 22 in W 26 in D 2.5 in
Dark Red
Black Expressive Abstract Painting by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Dark Red & Black Expressive Abstract Painting by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. This unique original forms part of a new body of work based on human emotions, and exp...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
$8,685 Sale Price
20% Off
H 18 in W 22 in D 2.5 in
Atmospheric Abstract Landscape Seascape Art of England using Blue
Warm Yellows
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Atmospheric Abstract Landscape Seascape Art of England using Blue & Warm Yellows by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. Entitled 'Serenity #07', this atmospheric painting ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
Angela WakefieldAtmospheric Abstract Landscape Seascape Art of England using Blue
Warm Yellows, 2022
$9,778 Sale Price
20% Off
H 22 in W 26 in D 2.5 in
Dark Red
Black Expressive Abstract Painting by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Dark Red & Black Expressive Abstract Painting by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. This unique original forms part of a new body of work based on human emotions, and exp...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
$8,685 Sale Price
20% Off
H 18 in W 22 in D 2.5 in
Abstract Landscape using Red, Black and Yellow by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Abstract Landscape by Contemporary British Artist, Angela Wakefield. A unique original using dark red, black and yellow colours, part of a new body of work based on human emotions.
...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
$10,378 Sale Price
47% Off
H 23 in W 29 in D 2.5 in
Miniature Landscape Study of Scottish Highlands by Contemporary British Artist
By Angela Wakefield
Located in Preston, GB
Miniature Landscape Study of the Scottish Highlands by Contemporary British Artist Angela Wakefield
Art measures 7 x 5 inches
Frame measures 1...
Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Paint, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic, Board
Angela WakefieldMiniature Landscape Study of Scottish Highlands by Contemporary British Artist, 2022
$1,365 Sale Price
20% Off
H 10 in W 12 in D 2 in
More From This Seller
View AllPikarli - My Country
By Yannima Tommy Watson
Located in Miami, FL
Yannima Tommy Watson is a Pitjantjatjara artist born around the 1930s, in the bush some 44km west of the small isolated community of Irrunytju. Not yet very well known to the French public, despite his participation in the architectural project of the Musée du Quai Branly, Tommy Watson is nevertheless often considered the greatest living Aboriginal artist.
Like many aborigines of his generation, he lived a traditional, nomadic or semi-nomadic life before his contact with Western civilization; then he will occupy the only jobs that the Aborigines find: herdsmen (until Yuendumu), laborers for the construction of infrastructures in the desert. Throughout this period he became familiar with his "country", a harsh region, and deepened his knowledge, both profane and sacred, relating to Dreams and Dreamtimes, to the connections between sacred sites and the Ancestors. He will even work in Papunya, where the artistic movement started. But the Pijantjarra are intransigent with tradition…no question at this time of revealing the motives and the secret stories.
The North of South Australia, the region where he is from, was touched by the pictorial movement only at the very beginning of the 2000s. In 2001, Tommy began his career as an artist in Irrunytju (Wingellina). He is a young artist… He learns by observing other painters and draws on the experiences of a long life and on the exceptional knowledge he has stored up. But quickly he will find his way, a radically new style where color plays a major role. Very quickly, the iconography now well known by the artists of Yuendumu, or the Western Desert, Balgo or Lajamanu disappeared. The symbols are no longer there. As Rover Thomas, Emily Kame or Paddy Bedford had done before him, this is a real artistic revolution. For Tommy, it is not a question of describing his Dream (Caterpillar), the routes taken by the Ancestors. He concentrates on a site, a story, sometimes very profane, the memory of a meeting, of a hunting party, tries to condense his memories, the information of which he is the depositary, to add a poetic touch to it, sometimes melancholy, and this gives a painting with a very abstract aspect. It is a painting where the emotion is very present, undoubtedly less cerebral than the art of the neighbors of the north the Pintupi, like Ronnie Tjampitjinpa, George...
Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Cotton Canvas, Acrylic, Linen
Ngayuku Kgura (My Country)
By Yannima Tommy Watson
Located in Miami, FL
Yannima Tommy Watson is a Pitjantjatjara artist born around the 1930s, in the bush some 44km west of the small isolated community of Irrunytju. Not yet very well known to the French public, despite his participation in the architectural project of the Musée du Quai Branly, Tommy Watson is nevertheless often considered the greatest living Aboriginal artist.
Like many aborigines of his generation, he lived a traditional, nomadic or semi-nomadic life before his contact with Western civilization; then he will occupy the only jobs that the Aborigines find: herdsmen (until Yuendumu), laborers for the construction of infrastructures in the desert. Throughout this period he became familiar with his "country", a harsh region, and deepened his knowledge, both profane and sacred, relating to Dreams and Dreamtimes, to the connections between sacred sites and the Ancestors. He will even work in Papunya, where the artistic movement started. But the Pijantjarra are intransigent with tradition…no question at this time of revealing the motives and the secret stories.
The North of South Australia, the region where he is from, was touched by the pictorial movement only at the very beginning of the 2000s. In 2001, Tommy began his career as an artist in Irrunytju (Wingellina). He is a young artist… He learns by observing other painters and draws on the experiences of a long life and on the exceptional knowledge he has stored up. But quickly he will find his way, a radically new style where color plays a major role. Very quickly, the iconography now well known by the artists of Yuendumu, or the Western Desert, Balgo or Lajamanu disappeared. The symbols are no longer there. As Rover Thomas, Emily Kame or Paddy Bedford had done before him, this is a real artistic revolution. For Tommy, it is not a question of describing his Dream (Caterpillar), the routes taken by the Ancestors. He concentrates on a site, a story, sometimes very profane, the memory of a meeting, of a hunting party, tries to condense his memories, the information of which he is the depositary, to add a poetic touch to it, sometimes melancholy, and this gives a painting with a very abstract aspect. It is a painting where the emotion is very present, undoubtedly less cerebral than the art of the neighbors of the north the Pintupi, like Ronnie Tjampitjinpa, George...
Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Linen, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
Woman
s Dreaming
By Walangkura Napanangka
Located in Miami, FL
As one of the last generation to remember a childhood lived in the desert hunting and gathering with her family, Walangkura Napanangka's paintings recall the stories of country and the location of specific sites in her traditional homeland west of the salt lake of Karrkurutinjinya (Lake Macdonald).
Born around 1946, at Tjitururrnga west of Kintore, in the remote and arid country between the Northern Territory and Western Australia, she lived with her father Rantji Tjapangati and mother Inyuwa Nampitjinpa and later, while still a teenager, travelled by foot with her family over the hundreds of kilometres from their remote desert home eventually joining Uta Uta Tjangala's group as they walked in to the settlements of Haasts Bluff and then Papunya.
The lure of settlement life with its promise of plentiful food and water belied the harsh conversion they would make to an alien lifestyle with its many problems and unfamiliar demands. The upheaval however, was ameliorated to some degree by the proximity of her immediate family including her mother Inyuwa, adoptive father Tutuma Tjapangati, and sister Pirrmangka Napanangka (now deceased) all of whom became artists.
Relocated to the community of Kintore in 1981 when the outstation movement began, Walangkura participated in the historic women's collaborative painting project (1994) that was initiated by the older women as a means of re-affirming their own spiritual and ancestral roots. It was a time of specifically female singing, ceremony and painting, away from the gaze of outsiders and men folk. The huge and colourful canvases that emerged from the women's camp were 'alive with the ritual excitement and narrative intensity of the occasion' (Johnson 2000: 197).
Within a year, Papunya Tula Artists, now established at Kintore, had taken on many of these women as full-time artists, revitalising the company after the deaths of many of the original 'painting men'. While individual women forged their own stylistic trajectory, these paintings were immediately distinguishable from the men's more cerebral and symmetrical style. They radiated an exuberant and vibrant energy, the felt heart-beat of women's affinity to country and spirit.
Walangkura's early works, created from 1996 onward, are characterized by masses of small markings and motifs covering large areas of canvas. Her favorite colour, a deep sandy orange predominates, accentuated against more somber blacks and reds and dusky greens or yellows. More recent works show a gestural quality though still tightly packed with an intensity of geometric line work representing sandhills. In a sense this provides a strong visual and contextual link to the men's linear style as exemplified by the works of George Tjungurrayi...
Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Linen, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
Tjintjintjin
By Walangkura Napanangka
Located in Miami, FL
As one of the last generation to remember a childhood lived in the desert hunting and gathering with her family, Walangkura Napanangka's paintings recall the stories of country and the location of specific sites in her traditional homeland west of the salt lake of Karrkurutinjinya (Lake Macdonald).
Born around 1946, at Tjitururrnga west of Kintore, in the remote and arid country between the Northern Territory and Western Australia, she lived with her father Rantji Tjapangati and mother Inyuwa Nampitjinpa and later, while still a teenager, travelled by foot with her family over the hundreds of kilometres from their remote desert home eventually joining Uta Uta Tjangala's group as they walked in to the settlements of Haasts Bluff and then Papunya.
The lure of settlement life with its promise of plentiful food and water belied the harsh conversion they would make to an alien lifestyle with its many problems and unfamiliar demands. The upheaval however, was ameliorated to some degree by the proximity of her immediate family including her mother Inyuwa, adoptive father Tutuma Tjapangati, and sister Pirrmangka Napanangka (now deceased) all of whom became artists.
Relocated to the community of Kintore in 1981 when the outstation movement began, Walangkura participated in the historic women's collaborative painting project (1994) that was initiated by the older women as a means of re-affirming their own spiritual and ancestral roots. It was a time of specifically female singing, ceremony and painting, away from the gaze of outsiders and men folk. The huge and colourful canvases that emerged from the women's camp were 'alive with the ritual excitement and narrative intensity of the occasion' (Johnson 2000: 197).
Within a year, Papunya Tula Artists, now established at Kintore, had taken on many of these women as full-time artists, revitalising the company after the deaths of many of the original 'painting men'. While individual women forged their own stylistic trajectory, these paintings were immediately distinguishable from the men's more cerebral and symmetrical style. They radiated an exuberant and vibrant energy, the felt heart-beat of women's affinity to country and spirit.
Walangkura's early works, created from 1996 onward, are characterized by masses of small markings and motifs covering large areas of canvas. Her favorite colour, a deep sandy orange predominates, accentuated against more somber blacks and reds and dusky greens or yellows. More recent works show a gestural quality though still tightly packed with an intensity of geometric line work representing sandhills. In a sense this provides a strong visual and contextual link to the men's linear style as exemplified by the works of George Tjungurrayi...
Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Linen, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic
Salt on Mina Mina
By Dorothy Napangardi
Located in Miami, FL
Dorothy Napangardi spent her early childhood living a nomadic life at Mina Mina near Lake Mackay in the Tanami Desert during the late 1950s and early 1960s. This idyllic life came to...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Linen, Polymer
Women
s Hairstring
Located in Miami, FL
Makinti Napanangka walked in to Haasts Bluff ration depot during the 1940’s with her young son when in her early 20’s and by the time she had moved to the new settlement of Papunya h...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
Materials
Linen, Polymer
Still Thinking About These?
All Recently ViewedMore Ways To Browse
Piero Manzoni
Johnny In Paris
Abstract Painting Pink Flowers
Ace Gallery
Acrylic Pour Painting
Burgundy Painting
John Smith Vintage
Abstract Couch
Abstract Korean Painting
Birthday Painting
Graffiti Art On Canvas
Hudson Bay
Modern Triptych Art
Sunflower Abstract
Abstract Sailboat
Airbrush Art
Architectural Blueprints
Large Horizontal Painting



