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Jigalong Community

Jigalong Aboriginal Community, the largest of the Martu communities, is located on the western edge of the Little Sandy Desert, not far from the town of Newman. Jigalong was established in 1907 as the site for a maintenance and rations store for workmen constructing the Rabbit Proof Fence, and was converted into a camel breeding site in the 1930’s before finally becoming a Christian mission under the Apostolic Church in 1947. Old Jigalong is where the camp on Jigalong Station was situated before the present Community was built. Jigalong and its surrounding land was returned to the Martu in 1974. 

For many Martu, Jigalong Mission was the site where their pujiman (traditional, desert dwelling) lifestyle came to an end from the late 1940s. From this time, they mostly transitioned to a life as stockmen and women working in cattle stations in the Pilbara region and beyond. In the wake of the extreme and prolonged drought of the 1960s, the last of the remaining pujimanpa (desert dwellers) were forced to move to missions like Jigalong, where a supply of food and water was assured. There, many were reunited with family members that had already moved in from the desert.

Name: Albert Pilkington


Language: Putijarra


Community: Jigalong


Biography:

“I was born in Kununoppin, in the wheatbelt. Left school when I was 15 and worked on cattle stations for 16 years, in the Pilbara, up through the Kimberleys, and back. My Grandfather is from east of Jigalong he didn’t see a whitefella until he was 18.
I started painting out of curiosity at first, and when I finished my first one I realised that I really liked doing it. I get a lot of inspiration from my love for country. I can’t get enough of it sometimes. I’ll be sitting at home and just get up in the car for a cruise, just to see the country. Now I’m up here I like to use earthy colours, colours of country. A lot of my painting is from memory. Been out here many times. Spent a lot of time out on this country. When I come back I want to pull up on the boundary and roll in the dirt. Walk outside, look around, get the colours, I love the colours.”
- Albert Pilkington

Albert is a Milankga man who speaks Martu Wangka. He was born in Kununoppin, but grew up in Geraldton where he lived with his mother and father. His mother Doris Pilkington was born in Belfour Downs Station and wrote the novel Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence which the 2002 film Rabbit-Proof Fence was based on.
After leaving school at the age of 15 Albert worked on cattle stations in the north of Western Australia for the next 16 years. He then returned to school as a mature age student, completing a Bachelor of Science at Murdoch University, and his Masters of Applied Epidemiology at the Australian National University in Canberra.

Today Albert lives in Newman with his daughter - one of his six children.
While Albert has only recently begun painting he has found an immediate love for it and is deeply inspired by the colours of his country. When he is not painting, he loves to horse riding or hunting for bush tucker. Bush turkey and goanna are his favourite.


© the artist / art centre