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Aru

Mary has depicted the pretty rocks (Aru) and pools of her husband’s country in Berkeley River.

Mary’s art details the rock formations along the Berkeley River as part of her ongoing connection to her husband and his country. Having lived and walked the river length with her husband and their children, Mary is acutely familiar with the geography and geology of place. Her swirling circle formation show the eddies of small rock pools and the rock markers along the river banks.

Here she played as a girl amongst the ‘aru’- rocks and stones, fishing, swimming and telling stories.  Occassional trees, palms and bush flowers add to her compositions of stones and rockholes signifiying a particular memory and place of importance.

Her inspiration came from the stories told to her by her husband. “The stories told to me while we hunted for fish and turtle. He was a good old man, my husband.” 

Name: Mary Umagarri Teresa Taylor


Language: Balangarri


Community: Kalumburu


Biography:

Mary was born in Wyndham and grew up in Oombulgurri (Forrest River). She learned painting from the old people by watching their ground paintings and painted for the first time in 2009. Mary moved to Kalumburu in 2005 to be with two of her seven children. Mary is one of the Traditional Owners for the Balanggarra land claim, determined in August 2013. Her bush name is Umagarri (swamp site) and her Oombulgurri Dreamings are Gari-Ali (goanna), Gin-Gun (Barramundi), Dorungi (cat fish) and Malarru (prawn). Mary paints her mother's Country Jinangi (Camera Pool on the Forrest River, northwest of Wyndham) and also the Country of her husband. "The Berkeley River area is my husband's country. We go here for camping out and fishing. Along the river there are large stones and rocks with trees growing out of them. When we have a 'bogey' (shower) we lie down on the flat rocks (tessellated rocks) to dry off."


© the artist / art centre