Meet the Artist

Lorna Napurrula Fencer

Lorna Napurrula Fencer

Lorna_Napurrula_Fencer_800x630a

Born

ca. 1920 - 2006

Skin name

Napurrula

Language

Warlpiri

Country

Lajamanu, NT

Lorna was born c.1920 in Yumurrpa country, which is situated near Chilla Well, south of the Granites Mine Area of the Tanami Desert.

Yumurrpa is an important Yam Dreaming site and the yam is a food staple for desert people that also hold important spiritual significance.

In 1949 many Walpiri people, including Lorna, were forcibly transported to the government settlement of Lajamanu at Hookers Creek, roughly 250 miles to the north of their own country around Yuendumu. Lorna nevertheless maintained and strengthened her cultural identity through ceremonial activity and art, and asserted her position as a prominent elder and teacher in her community.

Lorna was a skilled painter of decorative body designs for women’s ceremony, and in 1986 began to paint artworks on canvas. Over the next twenty years Lorna became a greatly admired artist who, along with Emily Kame Kngwarreye, pioneered the women’s art movement. They departed from the traditional iconography that men painted to a more personal and artistic expression.

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