Tiwi Designs

Tiwi Designs (Tiwi Designs Aboriginal Corporation) is an Aboriginal art centre located in Wurrumiyanga (formerly Nguiu) on the Tiwi Islands, North of Darwin, Australia. It holds a notable place in the history of the contemporary Aboriginal art movement as one of the longest running Aboriginal art centres, having started as a small screen-printing group in 1968-69.[1] Only Ernabella Arts (1948) and fellow Tiwi organisation Bima Wear (1967) can establish longer histories.[2]

Designs

Tiwi Designs began with a series of woodblock prints produced in a small room under the Catholic Presbytery in Nguiu in 1968. [3] These were produced by young artists Bede Tungatalum and Giovanni Tipungwuti with aid from Madeline Clear, the local art teacher. By 1969 these designs were being transferred to silkscreens, which remains a central medium for Tiwi artists and designers.[4] The art centre was officially incorporated as an association in 1980.[5]

Exhibitions

Tiwi Designs’ first exhibition was held in 1971 at the Sebert Gallery in Sydney.[6] Another Sydney exhibition, at the Hogarth Galleries in 1980, was greeted with coverage in Vogue magazine, the Sydney Morning Herald and the ABC evening news.[7] Within one year of this exhibition, a number of documentaries were made about the Tiwi Islands, Tiwi Tours was started and the turnover of Tiwi Designs increased tenfold from around $30,000 to $300,000 per annum. [8]

Current

The art centre today produces screen printed fabrics, ochre paintings on bark and canvas, ironwood carvings, ceramics, bronze and glass sculptures and limited edition prints.[9]

References

  1. Wright, Felicity (1999). The Arts and Crafts Centre Story, Vol 1: a Survey of 39 Aboriginal Community Art and Craft Centres in Remote Australia Undertaken by Desart Inc. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Commission. p. 26.
  2. Wright, Felicity (1999). The Arts and Crafts Centre Story, Vol 1: a Survey of 39 Aboriginal Community Art and Craft Centres in Remote Australia Undertaken by Desart Inc. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Commission. p. 26.
  3. Isaacs, Jennifer (2012). Tiwi: Art History Culture. The Miegunyah Press. p. 176-190.
  4. "Tiwi Designs". Association of Northern, Kimberly and Arnhem Land Aboriginal Artists (ANKAAA). Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  5. Wright, Felicity (1999). The Arts and Crafts Centre Story, Vol 1: a Survey of 39 Aboriginal Community Art and Craft Centres in Remote Australia Undertaken by Desart Inc. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Commission. p. 26.
  6. Isaacs, Jennifer (2012). Tiwi: Art History Culture. The Miegunyah Press. p. 181.
  7. Newstead, Adrian (2014). The Dealer is the Devil: An Insider's History of the Aboriginal Art Trade. Brandl and Schlesinger. p. 73. ISBN 9781921556432.
  8. Newstead, Adrian (2014). The Dealer is the Devil: An Insider's History of the Aboriginal Art Trade. Brandl and Schlesinger. p. 73. ISBN 9781921556432.
  9. "Tiwi Design". Retrieved 8 August 2015.
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