MCJ Wed28 Sep 2011Founding members of the Papunya Tula Artists,  Long Jack Phillipus Tjakamarra [left] and Ronnie Tjampitjinpa at the opening of the Origins of Western Desert Art Tjukurrtjanu exhibition at the Ian Potter Gallery NGV.The Age/News, Picture Michael Clayton-Jones, Story Robin Usher
Papunya Tula Artists, Long Jack Phillipus Tjakamarra, left, and Ronnie Tjampitjinpa at the opening of the Tjukurrtjanu exhibition. Photo: Michael Clayton-Jones
THE international art world was transformed 40 years ago in the most unlikely way with the first paintings on discarded boards by men from remote Papunya, 240 kilometres north-west of Alice Springs.
''They were paintings of extraordinary power that acted like a super nova at the sudden beginning of the Aboriginal art movement,'' according to the Museum Victoria chief executive Patrick Greene.
Or as one of the original artists, Long Jack Phillipus Tjakamarra, puts it: ''We started it like a bushfire, this painting business, and it went every way: north, east, south and west, with Papunya in the middle.'' He was at the National Gallery of Victoria yesterday with fellow veteran painter Ronnie Tjampitjinpa for the opening of a show that for the first time reunites many of the paintings from the original movement, featuring 20 of the 35 foundation artists.
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Tjukurrtjanu: Ronnie TjampitjinpaPintupi born c.1943Wartunuma (Flying Ant) Dreaming 1991synthetic polymer paint on canvas153.0 x 183.0 cmNational Gallery of Victoria, MelbournePresented through the NGV Foundation by anonymous donors, 2006? the artists and their estates 2011, licensed by Aboriginal Artists Agency Limited and Papunya Tula Artists Pty Ltd
Wartunuma Dreaming.
The pair were able to see their works again for the first time since they were sold. NGV director Gerard Vaughan said the Papunya efforts kick-started one of the great international contemporary art movements. ''These paintings caught the world's imagination,'' he said.
The exhibition, Tjukurrtjanu: Origins of Western Desert Art, includes about 40 paintings from Europe and America among more than 200 on display from private and national collections. Some have never been seen in public before.
They are combined with about 70 artefacts and films from Melbourne Museum illustrating the 1000-year-old tradition of body painting, shield illustration and song-and-dance rituals.
''Never have so many of these works been brought together before,'' Dr Vaughan said. ''It allows people to understand the origins of such an important movement.''
Tjukurrtjanu, or From the Dreaming has been more than four years in the making, and is the culmination of the NGV's 150th anniversary celebrations.
Combined with the Living Water exhibition of contemporary art from the Far Western Desert, it means that much of NGV Australia's Ian Potter Centre in Federation Square is devoted to indigenous art.
''It allows people to see the whole trajectory of the art movement at the same time,'' Dr Vaughan said. ''Such an opportunity will not come again for many years. A show like this is a huge, expensive effort but we have made it free to give people the opportunity see these amazing artworks more than once.''
The first paintings were suggested by art teacher Geoffrey Bardon, who was posted to Papunya in 1971 and found a dispossessed and dispirited community. But once the senior men began transcribing body markings and sand drawings on to discarded boards they began to feel empowered. The following year Bardon supplied them with acrylic paints and canvas, taking the paintings to Alice Springs for sale.
The NGV's senior curator of indigenous art, Judith Ryan, said the Papunya artists created new forms and meanings completely unexpected in the history of the avant-garde.
''The artists give us a new way to see the landscape,'' she said. ''The power of the paintings leave us without words.''
Tjukurrtjanu: Origins of Western Desert Art opens at the Ian Potter Centre: