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MB063121

Awelye (Women's Ceremony) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant) and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed)

Alvira Bird Mpetyane

Alvira Bird Mpetyane

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Medium
Acrylic on Canvas
Size
90 x 60cm
Year Painted
2026
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MB063121

Awelye (Women's Ceremony) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant) and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed)

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Catalogue Number:MB063121 ,Width: ,Height:

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Catalogue Number:
MB063121

Artist Profile

Indigenous Heritage & Family ConnectionAlvira Bird Mpetyane was born in 1984 in…

Artist Profile

Artist Profile

Alvira Bird Mpetyane
Born:

1984

Language Group:

Anmatyerre

Country:

Ilkawerne (El-go-an-na), Utopia Region, North East of Alice Springs, Northern Territory

Medium:

Acrylic on Canvas and Linen

Subjects:

Awelye (Women's Ceremony) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant) and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed), Awelye (Women's Ceremony) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum) and Alpar (Rat-Tail Plant)

Indigenous Heritage & Family Connection

Alvira Bird Mpetyane was born in 1984 into a family deeply embedded in the contemporary Indigenous art movement. An Anmatyerre speaker, she is the daughter of artists Paddy Bird - who is now deceased - and Eileen Bird. Her lineage connects her directly to her grandmother, the late Ada Bird Petyarre, a highly respected senior custodian and celebrated painter from the Utopia region. Today, Alvira shares her time between Alice Springs and Mulga Bore, living with her husband and children while carrying on her family's creative legacy.

Artistic Career Evolution & Mediums

Working with acrylic paint on canvas and fine linen, Alvira has developed a steady and dedicated creative practice. She bridges traditional knowledge with a modern canvas presentation, building on the artistic foundations passed down by her parents and grandmother. Her artwork is regularly featured by contemporary galleries, capturing the attention of collectors who value her deep lineage and fresh, expressive approach to desert narratives.

Utopia Art Style & Fine Dot Techniques

Alvira's paintings are highly regarded for their striking visual contrast and strong compositions. She is known for painting traditional symbols in vibrant, striking colours - particularly ochre yellows, sharp blacks, and crisp whites - set against a sophisticated grey background. Her work masterfully balances the raw energy of ancestral iconography with a clean, contemporary design aesthetic that brings magnificent depth to the canvas.

Dreamtime Stories & Cultural Significance

Her artwork is a beautiful expression of her spiritual connection to her ancestral country of Ilkawerne, located north-east of Alice Springs. Alvira's paintings primarily depict the ancient patterns of Awelye - the women's body paint and ceremonial rituals. Through these sacred designs, her work honours and preserves the ancestral storylines of the Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant), and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed).

COLLECTIONS
Mbantua Gallery Collection, Alice Springs, NT
EXHIBITIONS
2000
Combined Exhibition, Mbantua Gallery, Alice Springs, NT

Information

Artist Name, Artwork Size, Medium, Year Painted,

Information

Artist Name:
Alvira Bird Mpetyane
Artwork Size:
90 x 60cm
Medium:
Acrylic on Canvas
Year Painted:
2026
Title:
Awelye (Women's Ceremony) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant) and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed)
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

Alvira paints Awelye (Women's Ceremonial and Body Paint Designs) for Ahakeye (Bush Plum), Alpar (Rat-tail Plant) and Ntang Artety (Mulga Seed).

The Ahakeye is a very important story for Alvira that belongs to her country, Ilkawerne (El-go-an-na). The ahakeye, called bush plum in English by Alvira, is also known as the native currant or citrus. This shrub produces small white flowers, deep green citrus-like leaves and the ahakeye, which are black when ripe and very small. This fruit is favoured for its sweet taste and can be reconstituted in water if dry.

Alpar, the rat-tail goosefoot or green crumbweed plant, is a small, erect herb that is sticky to touch and scented heavily of citrus. Growing especially well in Mulga tree communities, it is found in abundance in Alvira's home in the Utopia Region, north east of Alice Springs.

Ntang Artety, the seed of the Mulga Tree. Ntang means seed in Alvira's language, and Artety is the word for Mulga Tree. This is a very important story for Alvira that belongs to her country, Ilkawerne (El-go-an-na). The mulga seeds are an important plant food throughout Central Australia, usually available to collect for several months of the year.

Located at
Mbantua Alice Gallery