Wakun
Date2006
Object number00056353
NameScreenprint
MediumPaper, ink
DimensionsOverall: 562 × 760 mm
Image: 505 × 710 mm
Image: 505 × 710 mm
Copyright©Banduk Marika
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection Donated through the Australian Government’s Cultural Gifts Program by Michael Kershaw
DescriptionThe print Wakun is by Banduk Marika AO (1954-2021), was the youngest daughter of Mawalan Marika, a member of the Rirratjingu clan of the Yolngu people. She was among a small group of women to be encouraged by their male relatives to paint ancestral creation stories. In 1980, Marika moved to Sydney and took up print making, drawing on her clan’s stories. A wakun is a medium sized mullet and features in the hunting and fishing stories and songs of the Marika's clan.SignificanceWakun by Banduk Marika AO is an important example of a print by this noted Aboriginal artist and environmental activist from Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory. One of the first women in her clan to be encouraged to paint creation stories, Marika took up printmaking in 1980 when she came to Sydney and her work is held by Australian and New Zealand museums and is in the National Gallery of Art in Washington. The print's provenance to the Michael Kershaw collection further adds to its significance as, in his position as managing director of the Australian Art Network, he has been responsible for the development and promotion of Indigenous art for over 25 years. Through the publication and distribution of fine art prints by First Nations artists, Kershaw has contributed to broader recognition of their work in Australia and internationally.
2005-2006
1987