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MB038512

Awelye (Women's Ceremony)

Medium
Acrylic on Canvas
Size
90 x 90cm
Year Painted
2008
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MB038512

Awelye (Women's Ceremony)

Info

Catalogue Number:MB038512 ,Width: ,Height:

Info

Catalogue Number:
MB038512

Artist Profile

Lena was mother to five children including that of artist Nora Petyarre. Lena's …

Artist Profile

Artist Profile

Lena Pwerle
Born:

c. 1934

Deceased:

2022

Language Group:

Anmatyerre

Country:

Ahalpere, Utopia Region, North East of Alice Springs, Northern Territory

Medium:

Acrylic on Canvas and Linen, Batik on Silk, Wood Carving

Subjects:

Soakage, Awelye (Women's Ceremony), Anwekety (Conkerberry)

Lena was mother to five children including that of artist Nora Petyarre. Lena's husband was Left Hand Sam Kngwarreye (deceased). Lena grew up at Utopia Homestead, some 240km North East of Alice Springs with her siblings Ray Loy, Cowboy Loy and Louie (Louis) Pwerle. Lena had also lived in many other places in the Utopia Region, including that of Ngkwarlerlanem in the northern reaches of Utopia where she lived with her husband and children for many years.

Initially Lena worked in the medium of batik along with over eighty other women from the Utopia Region in Central Australia. Her work in batik is featured in 'Utopia - A Picture Story'. In 1996 she was invited to represent Australia in Western Samoa for the Festival of Pacific Arts where she was marked as 'among the best available talent'. In this same year she also traveled to Indonesia with other women of Utopia for a workshop funded by the Northern Territory Department of Education so that they could learn more about the art of batik.

Lena began painting for Mbantua Gallery in the mid 1990's. Lena maintained and developed a number of unique styles over the years. Firstly a fine circular pattern of dots in some of Lena's earliest works reflect Soakages (or waterholes) that are spread across her land. Unkempt arced motifs represent her Awelye (women's ceremonial body paint designs). Short repetitive linear work accented with fine dots make up her Anwekety (conkerberry) paintings. Traditional colours of ochre reds, tawny yellows and soft whites, of which belong to her country Ahalpere, bequeath her early Soakage paintings and Awelye paintings with simplicity, and great mixes of colours are deliciously abundant in her Anwekety paintings and later Soakage works.

Lena enjoyed painting very much and was always found encouraging other family members to do so. She was a senior boss woman at Utopia and was on a number of government boards including the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority (which protects the sacred sites within the NT) and the Urapuntja council which governs Utopia. Lena's personality reflected this immense responsibility while exuding good nature and humour. A number of women's ceremonies have been performed at Mbantua Gallery over the years, and Lena had predominately been the woman behind the scenes ensuring that Utopia ladies participate to promote their culture as well as have fun.

Lena passed away on the 8th March 2022 and she spent her last few years in the aged care facility in Alice Springs. She was a real leader of her people at Utopia and was universally respected by all who knew her. There was not much that she didn't know about the bush. Hunting and collecting bush foods in the desolate regions of the Northern Territory was second nature to her. And of course, her understanding of the Dreamtime - ceremony and mythology was second to none! The passing of Lena is yet another loss from the diminishing, old-cultured, Aboriginal Australians.

COLLECTIONS
The Holmes à Court Collection, Perth, WA
Mbantua Gallery Collection, Alice Springs, NT
Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, NSW
EXHIBITIONS
1985
2nd National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, NT
1989
Utopia Women's Paintings, the first Works on Canvas, A Summer Project, 1988-1989, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, NSW
1990
Utopia - A Picture Story, an Exhibition of 88 works on Silk by Utopian artists, Holmes à Court Collection, toured Eire and Scotland
1991
8th National Aboriginal Art Award Exhibition, Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, NT
1992
Central Australian Aboriginal Art and Craft Exhibition, Araluen Arts Centre, Alice Springs, NT
1994
Central Australian Aboriginal Art and Craft Exhibition, Araluen Arts Centre, Alice Springs, NT
1999
Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT
2001
Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT
2002-2004
Mbantua Gallery USA exhibitions
2005
Small Wonders, Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT
2004-2006
Evolution of Utopia - opened by the Honorable Robert Hill, Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT
2009
Soakages, Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT
2014
Narrativa Herióca - Pintura Aborígine do Deserto Australiano - Renaissance Hotel, São Paulo, Brazil
2014
Arca Urbana, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
REFERENCES
Brody, A.
(1989) Utopia Women's Paintings The First Works on Canvas, A Summer Project 1988-89, exhib.cat., Heytesbury Holdings, Perth, WA
Brody, A.
(1990) Utopia: a Picture Story, 88 Silk Batiks from the Robert Holmes à Court Collection, Heytesbury Holdings, Perth, WA

Information

Artist Name, Artwork Size, Medium, Year Painted,

Information

Artist Name:
Lena Pwerle
Artwork Size:
90 x 90cm
Medium:
Acrylic on Canvas
Year Painted:
2008
Title:
Awelye (Women's Ceremony)
Free Shipping Worldwide!:
This painting on canvas will be shipped in a cylinder to you free of charge, worldwide! An option to have this painting 'stretched' onto a wooden frame may be available. If selected, further charges will apply and will be calculated at checkout.

Description

Lena paints Awelye (Women's Ceremonial and Body Paint Designs) for the ancestral dreamtime stories which belong to her country, Ahalpere.

Linear designs represent Awelye. These designs are painted onto the chest, breasts, arms and thighs. Powders ground from red and yellow ochre (clays), charcoal and ash are used as body paint and applied with a flat stick with soft padding. The women sing the songs associated with their Awelye as each woman takes her turn to be 'painted-up'. Women perform Awelye ceremonies to demonstrate respect for their country and the total well-being and health of their community.

Located at
Mbantua Alice Gallery