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My Country – Jessie Ngwarraye Ross

The community of Ampilatwatja made a conscious decision not to paint ‘altyerr’ dreaming stories. The artists paint their country where those stories belong.
Jessie’s landscapes beautifully communicate the rich knowledge she possesses of medicinal plants and country, the heart of her culture.
Jessie’s has painted her country, Ampilatwatja. The brightly coloured flowers and small bushes are bush medicine and are still used within the community.
Jessie’s predominant theme in her paintings is ‘strong bush medicine’, demonstrating a deep connection to her country. Her work pays homage to the significance and use of traditional bush medicine, allowing an insight into her community. Yet underneath the iridescent surface, there is an underlying sense that there is more to this landscape than meets the eye. In keeping with the religious laws, Jessie reveals only a small amount of knowledge to the uninitiated.

Name: Jessie Ngwarraye Ross


Language: Alyawarr


Community: Ampilatwatja


Biography:

I paint my Country, Amaroo.  I paint about bush medicine and the old ways, when people get sick we boil the bush medicine to washing babies and we drink it when we get the flu.  Our Grandmothers teach us to find bush medicine through painting and collecting bush medicine out bush.  I have always loved to paint.  

The purple flowers in my paintings are tropical speedwell which are used on skin conditions like scabies and also made into a tonic for drinking.  The yellow flowers are pretty flowers that grow in the country after rain and the purple flowers are bush tomato.


© the artist / art centre