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Nyangumarta Warrarn (Country)
“Nyangumarta Country is home to the Nyangumarta people — from the desert to the seaside. Old people lived and walked on this land, and we as Nyangumarta still look after it today. We go out on Country, hunting and living from the traditional foods of the land.
Nyangumarta people travelled and lived between the desert and the sea. This painting tells a story from the Nyangumarta Dreaming — of a woman who walked with her child along this Country collecting seafood, mayi. They were both on the reef when the tide came in and drowned them. Today, two rocks remain out by the sea, marking their story.
We carry our culture, and most people tell stories through their painting — that’s how it’s always been. Passing knowledge down. Younger people might not see it now, but in the future, they might want to follow in their Elders’ footsteps — carrying on the skills, knowledge, and way of life. It can be anything: painting, hunting, becoming leaders.”
– Venetta Yanawana
This artwork honours Nyangumarta Country — from the long sweep of Eighty Mile Beach and coastal flats to the rolling sand dunes and salt lakes of the Great Sandy Desert. It holds the movement between saltwater and desert: tides, reefs and mangroves to the west; dunes, claypans and waterholes to the east.
Lines flow like wind across spinifex and waves in the ocean; dots gather where waters sit after rain; colours shift from deep blues to desert reds and whites of saltpan. The painting also reflects the ongoing work of Nyangumarta families and rangers to look after Country — sea and land — guided by community plans and Indigenous Protected Area management.
