We highlight two large-scale paintings by Indigenous artists from Central Desert communities in South Australia — Wawiriya Burton’s Ngayuku ngura – My Country 2018 and Nellie Ngampa Coulthard’s Tjuntala Ngurangka (Country with Acacia Wattle) 2018 — two vibrant compositions that hum with energy and evoke the colours and heat of desert sands.
My Country
Burton and Coulthard, women of Australia’s central desert, are nationally significant contemporary painters whose colourful representations of their Country are shaping stylistic movements and traditions within their communities.
SIGN UP NOW: Subscribe to QAGOMA Blog for the latest announcements, recent acquisitions, behind-the-scenes features, and artist stories.
Wawiriya Burton

Wawiriya Burton is a senior Pitjantjatjara woman of law and culture and a revered Ngangkari (traditional healer). Born in 1925, Burton lives and works at Amata in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands of far north-western South Australia. During her childhood her family travelled across their country to the Warburton Mission in Western Australia, where she first recalls coming into contact with non-Indigenous people.1 Memories of her youth and stories of where she was born — on her father’s Country near Pipilyatjara in Western Australia, west of Amata — are often subjects of her work, which she paints in refined, complex depictions in brilliant colour.
The minyma mingkiri tjuta (small female desert mice) found at important cultural sites are celebrated in Ngayuku ngura – My Country. The artist explains:
The mingkiri are pregnant and give birth to many babies. They then journey to the surrounding rock holes in search of food and water for their young. The dotted lines [in the work] are mingkiri tracks.2
At almost two metres square the work has a confident presence, which is enhanced by an evocative composition of dense colour fields that hum with energy. Ngayuku ngura is arguably her most painted and revered subject, and in this work her Country appears as vast fields of dusty pink and eucalypt green, described by curator Diane Moon as ‘sage and silver contrasting with the rich, red colour of the earth’.3 The fields of colour bleed into each other in thickly clumped trails, reminiscent of the Amata landscape which is ‘dotted with round clumps of spinifex, sparse desert oaks and soft grasses’.4 These tracks, simultaneously macro and micro in their appearance, are of the earth, the mingkiri (mice), the flora and the Pitjantjatjara people.
Nellie Ngampa Coulthard

Roughly 300km south-east of the APY Lands is the community of Indulkana, home to respected Yankuntjatjara painter and educator Nellie Ngampa Coulthard. Coulthard’s striking and idiosyncratic works are reminiscences of her childhood living on country around Wintinna Homestead near Oodnadatta, on the edge of the Simpson Desert.5 Coulthard was raised in a wiltja (tin-and-log shelter) in this area and lived a semi-traditional lifestyle while her father worked at the homestead for rations.
Coulthard paints the country in a mix of styles, combining traditional dotting techniques in whites and yellows — evoking the colours and heat haze of the desert sands — while dividing the painting with meandering lines, which in one orientation reveal the local acacia wattles that she vividly recalls seeing in flower as a child, their vibrant yellows piercing the hard country. In Tjuntala Ngurangka (Country with Acacia Wattle), Coulthard’s composition of wattle trees is also suggestive of the many creeks that flow through the area, feeding Lake Eyre some 200km away. This country is renowned for transforming during times of rain, and Coulthard’s paintings often exhibit a tonal shift from hot colours to cool, evocative of the transformations that the country periodically undergoes.
Expansive and personal, gestural and precise, these two vibrant recollections of Country have made a vital contribution to the Gallery’s Collection of desert women’s paintings.
Katina Davidson is Assistant Curator, Indigenous Australian Art, QAGOMA and Bruce Johnson McLean is former Curator, Indigenous Australian Art, QAGOMA.
Endnotes
1 Tjala Arts (ed.), Nganampa Kampatjangka Unngu / Beneath the Canvas: The Lives and Stories of the Tjala Artists, Wakefield Press, Mile End, South Australia, 2015, p.140.
2 Artist statement in Certificate of Authenticity provided by Tjala Art, 2017.
3 Diane Moon, ‘Amata painters’, in Contemporary Australia: Women, Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, 2012, p.57.
4 Moon, Contemporary Australia: Women, p.57.
5 Nellie Coulthard quoted on Iwantja Arts, <http://www.iwantjaarts.com.au/our-artists/nellie-coulthard>, viewed June 2019.
Subscribe to QAGOMA YouTube to go behind-the-scenes / Watch video on Indigenous Australian Art / Read more about the Australian Collection
Acknowledgment of Country
The Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA) acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land upon which the Gallery stands in Brisbane. We pay respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander elders past and present and, in the spirit of reconciliation, acknowledge the immense creative contribution Indigenous people make to the art and culture of this country. It is customary in many Indigenous communities not to mention the name or reproduce photographs of the deceased. All such mentions and photographs are with permission, however, care and discretion should be exercised.
Feature image detail: Nellie Ngampa Coulthard Tjuntala Ngurangka (Country with Acacia Wattle) 2018
Burton’s Ngayuku ngura – My Country and Coulthard’s Tjuntala Ngurangka (Country with Acacia Wattle) are currently on display in the Queensland Art Gallery’s Australian galleries.
#QAGOMA
It’s a really nice article
i would like to use Wawiriya Burton, Pitjantjatjara people, Australia b.1925 image as a pert of my assignment on arts work inspiration, can i use it?
Hi Farhat. Thank you for making contact. You are approved to use this image for private research within the assignment only, the image can’t be reproduced anywhere else nor online without getting permission from Australia’s Copyright Agency. Regards, QAGOMA