Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi Pintupi, circa 1920-1987
Provenance
The Artist, painted at Alice Springs, Northern Territory, August 1972
Stuart Art Centre, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, consignment number 17, painting 9, cat. no. 17009
Tim Guthrie Collection, Melbourne
Sotheby's, Important Aboriginal Art, Melbourne, 30 June 1997, lot 19
Collection of John and Barbara Wilkerson, New York
Exhibitions
Papunya Tula: Genesis and Genius, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 18 August - 12 November 2000
Icons of the Desert: Early Aboriginal Paintings from Papunya, The Herbert F Johnson Museum, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 10 January - 5 April 2009; Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California, Los Angeles, 3 May - 2 August, 2009; Grey Art Gallery, New York University, New York, 1 September - 5 December, 2009
Tjukurrtjanu: Origins of Western Desert Art, The Ian Potter Centre, National Gallery Victoria, Melbourne, Australia, 30 September 2011- 12 February 2012; Musee du quai Branly, Paris, France, 9 October 2012- 20 January 2013
Abstraction & the Dreaming: Aboriginal Paintings from Australia’s Western Desert (1971 – Present), Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Utah State University, Utah, 11 September - 12 December 2015
Australian Consulate-General New York, Official Consul General Residence, New York, 5 October 2021 - 20 October 2022
60 over 50: 60 Paintings from 50 Years of Australian First Nations Art, UOVO, New York, May 2023
Publications
Sotheby's, Important Aboriginal Art, Melbourne, 30 June 1997, p. 21
Hetti Perkins and Hannah Fink, Papunya Tula: Genesis And Genius, Sydney, Australia: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2000 p. 45, 285 (illus.)
Geoffrey Bardon and James Bardon, Papunya, A Place Made After the Story: The Beginnings of the Western Desert Painting Movement, The Miegunyah Press: Melbourne, 2004, p. 200, painting 105
Roger Benjamin, Fred Meyers, Vivien Johnson, et al., Icons of the Desert: Early Aboriginal Paintings from Papunya, The Herbert F Johnson Museum, Cornell University, 2009
Vanessa Merlino and Luke Scholes, 60 over 50: 60 Paintings from 50 Years of Australian First Nations Art, UOVO, 2023, p. 42-43 (illus.)
Fred Myers, and Terry Smith, Six Paintings from Papunya: A Conversation, Durham: Duke University Press, 2024
“While living a traditional hunter-gatherer lifestyle in the arid Western Desert of central Australia, Lungkarta and his extended family group relied upon his knowledge of available water sources to survive. The location of reliable waterholes, soakage waters and claypans within the vast geography they occupied was also recorded in songs, ceremonies and ancestral stories passed between generations. When Lungkarta settled at the newly established community of Papunya, he recounted his knowledge of places in his paintings.
The pre-eminent scholar Fred Myers, Silver Professor of Anthropology at New York University, spent time living with Lungkarta during 1973-1974. Lungkarta was a close friend of Myers, and Myers credits him with having changed his life. During his fieldwork, Lungkarta was Myers’ primary informant, the result of their work together appearing in the seminal publication Pintupi Country, Pintupi Self: Sentiment, Place and Politics among the Western Desert Aborigines (University of California Press, 1991).” (Vanessa Merlino and Luke Scholes, 60 over 50: 60 Paintings from 50 Years of Australian First Nations Art, 2023, p. 42)
“Working with a brilliant simplification of motifs for hills, creeks, waterholes and Water Men at a fireplaces, Shorty here uses a refined dot patterning and raw linear treatment to create a timeless image of a Water Dreaming site in his Pintupi homeland.” (Geoffrey Bardon and James Bardon, Papunya, A Place Made After the Story: The Beginnings of the Western Desert Painting Movement, 2004, p. 200)