22024008519

Published by CompNet Systems on


Status: Stock


Marsha Pants, Mintjinperri design by Kelly Dixon, purple on red.

These cute wide leg culottes take their name from the 60’s stunner and inspiration behind the song Brown Sugar by The Rolling Stones, Marsha Hunt.
Featuring an elastic back, zip and button closure and generous side pockets, they are perfect for everyday wear.This funky piece of wearable art is part of our collaboration with Publisher Textiles. Each pair is printed and made in Australia.

Artwork details:

Artwork: Mintjinperri
Artist: Kelly Dixon
This print depicts the Papa Tjukurrpa (Dog Dreaming) in Mintjinperri, located East of Kintore. Mintjinperri is Pintupi country, owned by the Nungarrayi women. Mintjinperri is a site for woman’s business, where they gather for ceremony, using leaves to brush the earth. In this Tjukurrpa the Papas are walking around, searching for Kapi (waterholes). As they walk amongst the Tali (sandhills) and Puli (rocks) they leave footprints behind them. Today you can still see those footprints in the sand. This Tjukurrpa was passed down to Kelly from her mother, Alice Nampitjinpa Dixon, who received it from her mother, Panaria Nungarrayi. Panaria, Kelly’s maternal grandmother, is from Mintjinperri, this is her country and Tjukurrpa.

Care Instructions:

Cold gentle machine or hand wash
Line dry in shade
Warm iron on reverse
Do not tumble dry
Do not dry clean

Treat this handmade garment with love and it will love you back. To prolong the life for your garment, cold wash and use gentle detergents.

SIZING

Please refer to the size chart below.

Categories: Ikuntji Artists

Name: Kelly Dixon


Language: Luritja


Community: Haasts Bluff


Biography:

Kelly is the daughter of acclaimed artist Kumuntjai Nampitjinpa Dixon (dec) and Lindsay Tjapaltjarri (dec). Her mother’s sister is Inyuwa Nampitjinpa. Kelly is the granddaughter of Papunya Tula Artists founding member Uta Uta Tjangala (Kumuntjai’s stepfather). Uta Uta was central to the establishment of Papunya Tula Artists in 1972, where he painted continuously into the late 1980s. He also travelled extensively through the Western Desert in the 1970s, settling in Muyin outstation, west of Walungurru (Kintore) in the early 1980s.
Kelly was born in Lambara outstation, West of Warumpi (Papunya), in 1970. She first came to Ikuntji (Haasts Bluff) with her mother and father when she was four years old. Kelly primarily grew up in Ikuntji (Haasts Bluff), though has spent much time travelling. When she was a child, she moved between Yayayi, Warumpi and Ikuntji with her family. In the late 1970s, she was living with her family in Warumpi. Due to large migrations into the area, the Warumpi community was experiencing increasing problems with fighting and alcohol. The elder men of the community, including Kelly’s grandfather Uta Uta, had a meeting and decided to return to their country in Walungurru. This was part of the outstation movement.
When Kelly was 14, she remembers travelling from Warumpi to Yayayi, to Lambarra, Waruwiya, Watiyawanu, Nubo (West of Mt Liebig) and then back to Walungurru with her sister, Kathleen Dixon, and schoolteacher and former guitarist of Warumpi band, Neil Murray. She attended school at Yirrara College in Mpwernte (Alice Springs) before returning to Walungurru, and later to Ikuntji, where she has lived ever since. In her youth, she also travelled to Sydney with her mother and her niece from Kintore High School, to teach traditional women’s dancing to students there. She remembers teaching 18-year-old students to dance and to paint their bodies. When she was 20 years old, she travelled to Brisbane for the school holidays with her teacher, Jeff Malcombe. She remembers going shopping there and taking the train to Newmarket; the first time she had taken a train.

In 2012, she started painting for Ikuntji Artists, where she continues to work and paint today. Kelly paints her maternal grandmother’s Tjukurrpa (Dreaming) called Minjinperri, located East of Kintore. Kelly now works as an arts worker at Ikuntji Artists. She currently focuses her time on making jewellery from the native ininti seeds and gum nuts. She often spends hours delicately hand painting seeds to become necklaces, bracelets, and earrings.

In 2018, Kelly successfully completed a Certificate I in Visual Arts through the Batchelor Institute in Alice Springs, where she learned to design and print fabric, both digitally and by hand. In the same year, Kelly’s designs were also featured in Parrtjima festival, being turned into large lanterns in their ‘Forest Space’ installation. Kelly has extensively travelled in her arts worker role with Ikuntji Artists to Sydney, Brisbane, Darwin and Adelaide.


© the artist / art centre