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Tjala / Honey Ants

Tjala or honey ants live in nests about a metre underground beneath mulga trees, and they are a highly favoured food source. The tjala tunnels that lead down to the ants’ nests are called nyinantu, and the larvae are called ipilyka-ipilyka. After the rain when the ground is soft the women go digging for tjala by looking for the drill holes under the trees. They then use shovels and crowbars to dig down following the tunnels to find the tjala inside. Anangu suck the delicious rich honey-like liquid from the distended abdomen of the tjala. The story of the tjala is told across the Northern Territory into South Australia and is an important link between Anangu mythology and inter-dependence on the environment.

Categories: Ernabella Arts Inc.

Name: Venetta Lionel


Language: Pitjantjatjara


Community: Pukatja


Biography:

Vennita is the fourth generation of Lionel women to work as artists at Ernabella Arts. Her great-grandmother is the very senior artists Pantjiti Lionel, her grandmother the 2015 NATSIAA finalist Yurpiya Lionel and her mother the 2016 NATSIAA finalist Rachael Mipantjiti Lionel. Venita often paints collaboratively with her mother Rachael.

Vennita started painting at the art centre in 2014 and then participated in ceramics works in 2015 and 2016.

In 2016 Vennita participated in her first exhibition Point of difference - Desert to the Sea at Artitja Gallery in Freemantle, WA.

In 2019 Vennita exhibited in An Idea Needing to be Made: Contemporary Ceramics at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Wanapari - in a line, following one another at the Jam Factory and Ernabella Arts: Small Ceramics at Aboriginal Contemporary.


© the artist / art centre