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Steve Martin & Anne Stringfield

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Rover Thomas, Rainbow Dreaming, 1985

Rover Thomas Wangkajunga/Kukatja language group, circa 1926-1998

Rainbow Dreaming, 1985
Natural earth pigments and bush gum on composition board
24 x 47.2 inches (60 x 120 cm)
Photo: Courtesy of D’Lan Contemporary
View on a Wall
Wangkajunga/Kukatja Language Group

"This is a Dreamtime story about Wet Season.

The picture is a rainbow (TJADARUNG)"

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Provenance

The Artist, commissioned by Mary Macha, Perth, cat. no. MM9-4

Sotheby's, Tribal Art, Melbourne, 21 April 1991, lot 20

The Louise Smith Collection, Adelaide

Kimberley Australian Aboriginal Art, Melbourne, cat. no. KA.RT.0882/85

Private Collection, Sydney

Sotheby's, Important Aboriginal Art, Melbourne, 24 June 2002, Lot 20

Private Collection, Sydney

D’Lan Contemporary, Melbourne

Collection of Steve Martin & Anne Stringfield, New York

Exhibitions

Significant, D’Lan Contemporary in association with William Mora Galleries, Richmond, 30 May - 15 June 2019

Publications

Henry Skerritt and Luke Scholes, Significant, D’Lan Contemporary in association with William Mora Galleries, 2019, cover illus, p. 40-41 (illus.)
“Rover Thomas held strictly to the belief that one was to ‘paint country with country’. Although artists in other remote communities were painting with acrylic paints, East Kimberley artists continued using ochre, pigments and naturally occurring gums and resins as they had used them in rock paintings, ceremonies and the adornment of objects before European settlement. Rover Thomas commenced his painting practice in the early 1980s. His hybrid style, which featured a reinvention of East Kimberly traditional work, was developed through his travels across the expansive terrain of the East Kimberley as a stockman far from his own Country of the Kukatja-Wangkajunga people. Drawing together different places aligned to his mother and father’s Country, Rover Thomas tells their stories with broad areas of naturally sourced colour from underground, red from the burnt red ochre or haematite, yellow from the limonite and white from the kaolin clays, gypsum calcite or burnt selenite.” (Vanessa Merlino and Luke Scholes, 60 over 50: 60 Paintings from 50 Years of Australian First Nations Art, 2023, p. 14)
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    Rover Thomas, Bungullgi, 1989

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