105-year-old artist is winning fans across the world
Creative passion is perhaps the secret to a long life.
Aboriginal artist Loongkoonan
is proving that age is just a number by creating award-winning art well
into her 100s. The exhibiting artist, born on a station (known as a
ranch in the U.S.) around 1910, is believed to be one of Australia's
oldest painters.
A matriarch of Nyikina country, an area which surrounds the Fitzroy River in Western Australia, Loongkoonan
has said that when she was born no one worried about recording births
and deaths of Indigenous people or teaching reading and writing.
Loongkoonan, who rejects her
"whitefella" name Daisy, given to her in her station days, began
painting in her late 90s to keep busy.
The oldest speaker of the endangered Nyikina language, Loongkoonan spent
her youth exploring the land with her grandparents by foot, learning
about bush tucker — animals and plants eaten in the outback — and the
lay of the land. These have since inspired her art.
"I
still enjoy footwalking my country, showing the young people to chase
barni (goannas) and catch fish. In my paintings I show all types of bush
tucker – good tucker, that we lived off in the bush. I paint Nyikina
country the same way eagles see country when they are high up in the
sky," Loongkoonan told Mossenson Galleries previously.
Artist Loongkoonan with a selection of her works in the 2016 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Magic Object.
Indigenart-Mossenson Galleries owner Diane Mossenson, who purchased
the first work produced by Loongkoon, said the artist uses painting as a
way to record memories and knowledge of her country. In the dots of the
traditional Aboriginal art, Loongkoonan documents her life and
connection to the country, along with her knowledge of various plants,
bush medicine and bush tucker.
"Loongkoonan’s paintings are records of her connection to country
which she foot walked all over when younger. They reflect her intimate
knowledge of this land, and as such are a powerful record of Aboriginal
heritage and knowledge," Mossenson said. "Loongkoonan’s message is one
of handwork, resilience, endeavour and energy."
Loongkoonan has created around 380 works, using acrylic paints on
canvas and linen, during her career and shows no signs of slowing down.
Currently she is exhibiting in the Biennial of Adelaide and the Australian Embassy in Washington D.C., spreading her knowledge of the land to a wide audience.
"Loongkoonan’s beautiful interpretation of country is unique in
Indigenous art, as her mark making is delicately beautiful particularly
for a Kimberley artist," Mossenson said.
105-year-old artist is winning fans across the world
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