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The paintings
of Australian Aboriginal artist Kathleen Petyarre have been compared internationally to those
of the minimalist modern artists Mark Rothko and Agnes Martin, not
so much for their formal structure: but for what underlies beneath,
partially hidden from the observers view. In actuality, Kathelen
Petyarres paintings are mental territorial maps which portray
her country and the narrative associated with her inherited Dreaming
stories.
Her celebrated
works, Mountain Devil Lizard Dreaming, when presented on a grand
scale, depict the whole of her ancestral country (which covers some
200 square kilometers of the eastern desert of central Australia),
whilst other works, like the My Country and Rock-holes series, present
a seasonal snapshot within: a close-up of a geographical location
spiritually important to the artist.
Since her first
works-on-canvas appeared in 1988 in the collaborative Utopia exhibition
A Summer Project (The Holmes a' Court Collection), Kathleen
Petyarres oeuvre has always been identified by her deft minimalist
overtures. Now, in the summer of 2004/5, we see a new style of work
emerging, bolder, perhaps more abstract, certainly more modern in
its technicality and presentation, yet each work retains her
signature form and elegant style of delicacy. Through her beautiful
and highly evocative paintings, Kathleen Petyarre continues to retain
her position at the forefront of the Australian contemporary art
movement.
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