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Woven Hat

Maureen Ali, established Burarra fibre artist, has created a whimsical contemporary fashion piece, in the form of a woven wide brimmed hat. The hat draws on the intricate traditional weaving technique used to make burlupurr (dilly bags) and bamagora (conical mats), and made from made from Pandanus spiralis, a plant which grows in many areas of Arnhem Land. Common colours used to dye pandanus used for weaving burlupurr include: – barra gu-jirra: the soft, white and fleshy end of the pandanus leaf imparts green to the fibre. – mun-gumurduk/ gala (Pogonolobus reticulatus): a bright yellow root that is crushed and put in a billycan with the fibre and boiled. It creates yellow when boiled once and deep orange hues when boiled multiple times. – ngalpur (Haemodorum brevicaule): a bright red root which yields a range of purply red to brown colours. – Baluk: ashes of certain plants are added to the boiling billycan with the fibre and dye plants to alter the colour that is imparted to the fibre. The fruiting body of gulpiny (Banksia denanta) is burnt and the ashes added to other day plants to make the colour pink.

Name: Maureen Ali


Language: Burarra (Martay)


Community: Maningrida


Biography:

Maureen Ali learned to weave under the guidance of her sister Bonny Burarn.garra, a highly skilled fibre artist who has exhibited in commercial galleries around Australia since the 1990s. She also learned from her watching her mother, leading fibre artist Lorna Jin-gubarrangunyja, who won the Wandjuk Marika Award at the 20th Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award (NATSIAA) in 2013 with a colourful pandanus fish trap.

Maureen has been practicing since 2006. She is Burarra, one of the east-side language groups who specialise in the customary conical dilly bags, woven string bags and mats. She is particularly renowned for the use of mirlarl, (malaisia scandens), a type of vine that grows in the coastal jungle. The use of this vine to manufacture fish traps, barriers and large strong dillybags is unique to this region. 

 


© the artist / art centre