Ada Bird Petyarre
Tribe: Anmatyerre
Area: Utopia, Northern Territory
Born: circa 1930
Biography:
Prominent Aboriginal artist Ada Bird Petjarre is known for her graphic depictions of body painting designs worn by Anmatyerre women. Ada Bird represents the body paint designs worn in ceremonies associated with the abundance of bush foods found in Utopia and its surrounding areas. Native grasses are soaked in ochre paint and splashed against the skin to produce a decorative effect. Breasts, neck and backs are finger-painted in raw linear patterns. The women paint each other with designs according to their skin name and tribal hierarchy. This is accompanied by singing for the few hours prior to the ceremony in order to call the spirit ancestors.
A connection with the fertility of the land, and celebrating the provision of bush tucker is a recurring theme within women’s body painting and ceremonial designs of Utopia artists. Ada combines both traditional designs and representational elements in her paintings.
Her Dreamings are from her home country of Mulga Bore (Akaye Soakage); the Angertla (Mountain Devil Lizard), Emu (Unyara), Yam and native grass seeds (Kadjera). Ada is a senior woman at Utopia. She was born in Utopia, 230km north-east of Alice Springs. This cattle station was bought back from white landowners in 1978. Ada began making batiks in the late 1970s.
She shares these Dreamings with her aunt, Emily Kngwarreye (deceased) and her four sisters Gloria, Violet, Myrtle and Kathleen. She has two daughters, June and Hilda, and four sons, Colin, Steven, Paddy and Ronnie.
Collections:
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra