Sculpture Tjulpu (bird) Jezabel Hopkins 1071-24
Sculpture Tjulpu (bird) Jezabel Hopkins 1071-24
Share
When collecting desert grasses (minarri, wangurnu and yirlintji), women visit sacred sites and traditional homelands, hunt and gather food for their families, and teach children about country. Grass is bound with wool, string or raffia and combined with natural elements such as yirnirnti (red seeds of the bat-wing coral tree) and wipiya (emu feathers).
Dimensions: (L x W x H) 33cm x 19cm x 12cm
Materials: Tjanpi (grass), acrylic wool, raffia
Tjanpi Desert Weavers is a social enterprise of the Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (NPY) Women’s Council created to enable women in Australia's remote central deserts to earn their own income from fibre art. Tjanpi represents more than 400 Aboriginal women artists from 26 remote communities on the NPY lands. The NPY lands cover approximately 350,000 square kilometres across the tri-state (WA, SA, NT) border region of Central Australia.