1966
Language Group:Eastern Arrernte (Aranda)
Country:Santa Teresa, South East of Alice Springs, Northern Territory
Medium:Acrylic on Canvas, Linen and Paper, Decorative Craft
Subjects:Women Collecting Imuna (Bush Food), Women Collecting Tyape Atnyematye (Witchetty Grubs), Women Collecting Yerrampe (Honey Ant), Merne Arrwerneng (Wild Passionfruit), Merne Alangkwe (Bush Banana), Women's Ceremonial Dancing, Women Collecting Merne Awe
Marie Ryder grew up at Santa Teresa (Ltyentye Apurte) community, 80kms southeast of Alice Springs with her eight younger brothers and sisters. Her mother is Therese Ryder, a highly respected illustrative and landscape artist. Marie is married to Kevin Bird Mpetyane (grandson of Ada Bird Petyarre) and lives happily with their children in Kevin's country in the Utopia Region, North East of Alice Springs. Marie also has another two children from her first marriage.
Marie first put paint to canvas when she was in her early 20's. As a child, she watched her mother painting, observing her techniques and from this developed her own style. Her paintings are a celebration of the bush foods from Central Australia. They are highly representational using rich colours to depict her country.
Her work is held in many private collections both interstate and overseas. Her work has also been represented in many group exhibitions.
Marie paints women collecting the Merne Awele Awele, known as the wild tomato or gooseberry. Merne means food in Marie's language and Awele Awele is the wild tomato. The clonal sub-shrub of the awele awele grows most commonly on foothills and lower hill slopes throughout Central Australia. It produces beautiful purple flowers and velvety grey or bluish-green leaves and the tomatoes are produced in abundance during good moisture conditions. Once collected, the Aboriginal people eat the tomatoes raw or put them in the hot earth by the fire and cook them.
Women, represented by 'U' motifs, can carry with them their digging sticks and coolamons (carved wooden bowls) which are typical instruments used for collecting many bush foods.