‹ paintings
The Art of Eddie Burrup
1940s 2000, a continuum
< back | next > | |
10 to 18 of 50 artworks |
||
The extensive body of work, visual and written, created between the years 1994 and 2000 that comprises The Art of Eddie Burrup is the final phase in the evolution of Elizabeth Duracks oeuvre. In spirit and purpose it aligns with all that came before; it can be traced back some 60 years. It was nascent in the 1930s and probably first emerged in recorded visual form via The Whirlwind drawings and paintings of 194041. Towards the end of her life through her daemon, Eddie Burrup Elizabeth Durack distilled a lifetime of living and learning, of giving and taking, of exploring, reflecting upon and of recreating lost worlds of an ancient culture. Her art is homage to this culture. It also honours and fulfills an exceptional talent. |
- The headwaters of the Yule River
- 1996
- ink, resiste and oil pastel on linen
- 106 x 58 cm
- exhibited at the 13th Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards, Darwin, August 1996
- private collection
- Eddie's title
Alright, I tell'm you:
Ol' pella, 'e comin' out now
brom under neat' ...
Now 'e talk little bit
'la emu 'n rock wallaby:
'Goo'day!' he talk,
'I go 'la level country,
you wan' to come gissa gissa?'
'No more! We like it 'la dis place
Stand up straight see forever!'
Alright, so ol' fella 'e go on meself.
D'reckly 'e come on t'at rocky bar
(You see'm rocky bar?
'e dere alright )
'e chleepin' now.
Bye 'n bye cyclone come up
'e go on den ...
Artist's note
The rock python emerges from the foothills of the Chichester Range and is about to start creating the Yule River. The python rests at the rocky bar until such time as the next pluvial will carry him over the impediment.
Aboriginal cartography has the Yule River and all the rivers divided into sections commemorating the creation myth and the paths of the serpentine ancestors. Encounters, conversations, exchanges; contentions, duels and cobber-cobbers punctuate the way and prescribe language variations.