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Coil Basket

Coil basketry is a well-established fibre art form in the Maningrida region, especially for women from the Kuninjku, Rembarrnga, Ndjebbana and Nakkara language groups. 

Artists make coiled baskets of many shapes and sizes, ranging from small round baskets to large oval baby baskets, and made mostly from pandanus fibre that is dyed with natural pigments. Bundles of fibre are formed into coils which are covered and stitched together with strands of fibre threaded onto a needle. Artists combine colours and patterns to obtain intricate new graphic patterns.

These techniques are believed to have been introduced to Arnhem Land by Greta Matthews, a missionary on Goulburn Island in the 1920s. She had probably learnt coil basketry from Aboriginal people in the south-east of Australia, possibly the Murray River people such as the Yorta Yorta or the coastal Ngarrindjeri. 

The coiling technique spread quickly from Goulburn Island to people on mainland Arnhem Land. 

 

 

Name: Deborah Yulidjirri


Language: Kuninjku


Community: Maningrida


Biography:

Deborah is the daughter of acclaimed Kunwinjku artist Thompson Yulidjirri  (1930-2009) and learnt to paint on bar k and carved wooden sculptures under his tutelage.

She was wife to S. Namunjdja (1965 - 2018)and paints the themes of her husbands country such as Kunkurra (Cold spiralling wind) and Ngalng (Freshwater Yabby). Similar to her husband her uses and application of ochres are incredibly fine in the West Arnhem style, her artworks glow.

 


© the artist / art centre