Yirawala MBE

Yirawala was a senior Kunwinjku artist, ceremonial leader and law-holder whose work fundamentally reshaped the reception of Aboriginal art in Australia. Born on his Country in western Arnhem Land, near the Liverpool River, he was raised within a lineage of ritual authority, learning sacred designs, songs and ancestral knowledge from his father, a respected religious custodian.

By the mid-twentieth century, Yirawala had emerged as one of the most influential bark painters of his generation, using art as a means to communicate the depth, complexity and sovereignty of Aboriginal culture to non-Indigenous audiences. His paintings draw upon major ceremonial traditions, including Mardayin, Lorrkkon and Wubarr, reimagined through refined line, rhythm and pattern informed by body design and rock art.

Yirawala was the first Indigenous artist to be collected in depth by the National Gallery of Australia, which holds a major corpus of his work. His legacy endures internationally, both as an artist of exceptional vision and as a key advocate for cultural recognition and land rights.

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