SUSIE BOOTJA BOOTJA - KANINGARRA
SUSIE BOOTJA BOOTJA NAPALTJARRI
KANINGARRA, 2001
120 x 80 cm; 122.5 x 82.5 cm (framed)acrylic on linen
REGION
Wirrimanu (Balgo Hills), WA
PROVENANCE
Warlayirti Artists, WA Cat No. 720/01
Private collection, Vic
Private collection, ACT
Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Warlayirti Artists
STORYSusie walked in from the desert as a teenager to Tjumundora, one of the early mission sites, and then moved to the old mission at Balgo Hills in WA in 1946. where she worked in the kitchen making bread and helping serve food to the dormitory children. There she met her first husband and had her first child, Lucy. Her husband was killed on a mustering trip due to intertribal conflict and left her a widow. Later she eloped with Mick Gill Tjakamarra, to whom she was devoted for the rest of her life, and had another six children. She had a vibrant and colourful personality and was respected for her knowledge of the law and ceremony pertaining to the fresh water spring, Kurtal. She liked to relate stories about playing at the waterhole in the northern reaches of the Canning Stock Route, where she spent her youth. Susie was one of the first women painters at Balgo Hills. Her eldest son, Matthew Gill, started up the Art Centre in Balgo Hills in 1985 with Sister Alice Dempsey from the St John’s Adult Education Centre.Suzie was renowned for her ability to intermix western and traditional representations of country (hills, trees, snakes) along with a lively use of colour, especially bright greens, pinks and sky blues. In 1996 she began a series of innovative dotted colour field works which became her favoured style in the years immediately preceding her death in 2003.
EXHIBITED
Balgo Past and Present, 1st March - 13th April 2014, Cooee Art Leven, NSW
ARTIST PROFILE