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Kantawara

“The yellow means kantawara. Kantawara is like ochre, theres a red, white, and yellow. You can smash it and put water on it and its like a paint for rock painting. Ochre is the red (yulpa). Kantawara is the yellow one used for painting up for woman’s corroboree dancing Yawulyu, they use two colours, white and yellow. The white is used for Sorry Business, when people passed away. That’s why I put the yellow, the painting represents my mother’s grandfather, his name was Nyunana Tjakamarra Kantawarra. He’s part of this Country, Winparrku and Yaya-yii. That’s the Country I represent with the yellow colour of my painting. You can also see bush foods. Purple one is bush coconut, wanpanpi. You can’t just eat it because it has a hard shell. When you get it from the tree you have to hit it with a rock to open it up to see what kind is inside, then you can eat it. Red ones are akatjiri, bush sultana. when it’s dry it’s like a sultana, when it’s there in a tree it tastes like a cherry tomato. When you eat lots of akatjiri that means cleaning the stomach, good for the stomach. Those green seed pods are pangkuna, bush bean. They have stringy leaves and a long curvy pod. Inside there’s the round bean, the pangkuna bush bean with the seed, you can eat that one when you cook the whole pod by laying it in the fire for a few minutes and then taking it out.” – Joyce Dixon

Categories: Ikuntji Artists

Name: Joyce Dixon


Language: Luritja, Pintubi


Community: Haasts Bluff


Biography:

Joyce Dixon was born in 1977 at Papunya, and has been painting since she was around 10 years old. She paints her country, Karrinyarra (Mount Wedge), which is around two hours’ drive north of Haasts Bluff. This is the country of the Napaltjarri women and Japaltjarri men. She was raised partly by Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri and Paddy Tjungarrayi Carroll, two senior lawmen and renowned artists of the Papunya Tula art movement of the 1970s, and much of Joyce’s childhood was spent steeped in the artistic traditions of this area. Joyce paints a number of stories, including the Snake and Water Dreaming (Ngapa Tjukurrpa), the Witchetty Grub and Snake Dreaming, Bush Onion and Bush flowers. She has inherited these stories from senior relatives on both her mother’s and father’s sides.

She is married to Henry Multa, the brother of Douglas Multa (traditional owner of Haasts Bluff). Joyce lives between her husband's community Ikuntji, her community (Papunya) and Alice Springs. 


© the artist / art centre