Close Menu
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
What's Hot

Lead Artist edges out Dancing Gemini in Boylesports Lockinge Stakes

May 17, 2025

Fine Arts Fiesta’s full entertainment lineup continues on Wilkes-Barre Public Square

May 17, 2025

Canvass The Opportunity: Your Guide To Investing In Australian Art

May 17, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
Rate My ArtRate My Art
Home»Artist»Remembering the pioneering Australian Indigenous artist whose meticulous bark paintings captured a hidden power – The Art Newspaper
Artist

Remembering the pioneering Australian Indigenous artist whose meticulous bark paintings captured a hidden power – The Art Newspaper

By MilyeFebruary 14, 20254 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


A giant of Australian Indigenous art has died in the isolated settlement of Maningrida, on the Northern Territory coast, near where he lived his whole life.

According to cultural protocols, until the family gives permission, the artist cannot be referred to by the name the world knows him by. The same protocols apply to the publication of photographs of him or his work.

The artist is referred to instead as Balang Nakurulk (Mr Mawurndjul) AM in an announcement of his death that was issued on 25 January by Maningrida Arts and Culture.

The artist died on 21 December 2024, less than three months after the passing of his partner of 51 years, the renowned artist Bulanjdjan Ngalkardbam (Kay Lindjuwanga).

Balang was born in 1952. He lived in the bush until 1963 when he was brought to Maningrida for leprosy treatment. The leprosy had affected his hands—notable, given the extreme steadiness that his painting technique demanded.

“From the late 1970s he gained a rapidly growing reputation as a painter on bark, deploying intricate cross-hatched patterns called ‘rarrk’,” the Maningrida statement said.

Balang won four Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards and the Clemenger Prize. In 2010 he was awarded an Order of Australia “for service to the preservation of Aboriginal culture as the foremost exponent of the Rarrk visual art style”.

Balang was celebrated in Australia with many exhibitions at prestigious museums. He had solo exhibitions at institutions abroad including Museum Tinguely in Basel, Switzerland, and the Sprengel Museum in Hannover, Germany.

He was commissioned to create a work of art onsite at Paris’s Musée du Quai Branly before the museum opened in 2006.

What defined Balang’s work?

Balang’s large oeuvre of paintings in ochres on stringybark exuded power and energy because of the way they were painted, says Nici Cumpston, the curator of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art at the Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA), to The Art Newspaper.

These works recorded the animals, plants and spirit beings of his homeland. “He would paint the various ancestors and the stories of what happened to them at particular places,” Cumpston says.

The artist would turn and walk away from a painting while he was working on it, then wheel around to see whether it had a “shimmer”, Cumpston says.“He was always looking for the power within the painting,” she continues.

Balang took himself and his practice seriously. “I think it was when he did a trip to the National Gallery of Australia, and he saw some really large scale paintings, that he thought to himself, ‘this is an opportunity; let’s go big. This is what artists around the world are making and we can be these people; we are these people,’” Cumpston says.

Cumpston, who is an artist as well as a curator, spent a lot of time with Balang when she co-curated a major retrospective exhibition held at the AGSA in Adelaide and at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia in Sydney. She also travelled to Berlin with Balang when they were both in the same exhibition.

“We visited a number of museums together, with (Australian teacher) Murray Garde interpreting,” she says. “Balang was able to share his thoughts about art and culture. He really thought deeply about the role of art and ideas; we could see that and we learned from him.”

She continues: “He had that fascination about works of art and artists, and how the world is held within art, not only for his culture but for people internationally.”

Balang had been instrumental in the establishment of the Babbarra Women’s Centre in Maningrida, a space where women make art. “He very much knew that women were the backbone, and was really strong in supporting them,” Cumpston says.

Cumpston will soon leave her role at the AGSA. In May, she will become director of the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.

The Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, which includes more than 3,600 artworks, is the only museum outside of Australia dedicated to the exhibition and study of Indigenous Australian art.

  • Balang Nakurulk; born 1952; died Maningrida, Northern Territory, Australia; 21 December 2024



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleNY Fine Arts Society of Long Island celebrates inaugural exhibition
Next Article Los Angeles wildfires tested the city’s art handling and storage infrastructure – The Art Newspaper

Related Posts

Artist

Lead Artist edges out Dancing Gemini in Boylesports Lockinge Stakes

May 17, 2025
Artist

Meet Slawn, the artist behind the Emirates FA Cup Final’s Wembley feel for 2025

May 16, 2025
Artist

Inside AJ Odudu’s Big Brother glam: her makeup artist breaks down every major look

May 16, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Lead Artist edges out Dancing Gemini in Boylesports Lockinge Stakes

May 17, 2025

Masha Art | Architectural Digest India

August 26, 2024

How can I avoid art investment scams?

August 26, 2024
Monthly Featured
Artist

Artist Plate Project Reveals 2025 Featured Artist Lineup

MilyeApril 23, 2025
Art Investors

how new immersive institutions are changing the art world

MilyeOctober 15, 2024
Art Investors

Sotheby’s $700m art-backed debt security explained

MilyeOctober 15, 2024
Most Popular

Work by Palestinian artist to open NIKA Project Space’s Paris gallery

August 28, 2024

Woordfees: Printmaking exhibition explores human rights in democratic SA

October 12, 2024

Woman in hysterics after tattoo artist makes major spelling mistake on her arm – TikTok

March 27, 2025
Our Picks

Saif Ali Khan’s passionate conversation about fine art bored Kunal Kummu to sleep; Sharmila Tagore has ‘middle-class values’ despite being a begum | Bollywood News

October 22, 2024

Entries open for Rotary Young Photographer & Artist Competition

October 29, 2024

Viviane Sassen considers fine art, fashion photography and fragility in Italy

April 28, 2025
Weekly Featured

In a first, Prime Volleyball League introduces state-of-the-art heart rate monitors

August 29, 2024

The American Academy of Arts and Letters Opens Up to New Art

October 23, 2024

Helen Meyrowitz launched a first-rate gallery at her Needham retirement community. At 92, she’s retiring with a solo show

October 22, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
  • Get In Touch
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2025 Rate My Art

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.