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My Black Soil Country

This painting is of Ngarrawanji which is black soil country grass and rocky country which gets really boggy when it is wet.

“I paint it in different colours but it always goes back to my Black Soil Country, we’ve got a lot of black soil country through t our country, once you’re in it you can get stuck in it, I remember being stuck in black soil country as had incidents even after being told not to go there, because of me having encounters on black soil country I can recollect my times on my country, they would say don’t go that way, that’s black soil country! but sometimes there is only one road. It pays a big part in me, that’s what I think about in my country, that black soil”

Name: Christine Farrer


Language: Gija


Community: Bidyadanga


Biography:

“I paint with seeds because seeds is my thing. Seeds brings new life. Whether it’s from plants, animals or people. A lot of paintings and things were done by men only because back then, women were gathering food and caring for kids. I was inspired by my uncle who is an artist and I really wanted to paint but knew I had boundaries and that’s why I use seeds as my theme, because it’s bringing new life.”
– Christine Farrer

Christine (Wybier/Wytbier) Farrer grew up in Halls Creek. Her mother’s side and grandmother’s Country is Ngarrawanji, and her father’s side is from the Northern Territory. She is Luunga, Gija woman from Ngarrawanji. Inspired by her uncle, who painted animals and landscapes around Halls Creek, Christine developed her own style of painting using seeds as a way of telling stories and respecting cultural boundaries.

Now living in Bidyadanga with her Karajarri husband and family, Christine paints her black soil Country and the plants and animals that bring new life. She is passing her “seeds style” on to her daughters and children.

“When I paint, it relieves me from the overload in my mind. I use it as therapy to release the ideas that are stuck in my head. Painting is the only way I can connect to my home and Ngarrawanji Country because I live far away, in Bidyadanga.”
– Christine Farrer


© the artist / art centre