Aborignial Paintings Preserve Ancestral Dreams and Maybe the Future as Well

 

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

 

In case you wish you were out of the city, for only another two weeks ( until Sept 2), you can take a vicarious trip to the Australian deserts and shores at the Ancestral Modern Exhibition at the Seattle Art Museum.

 

The exhibition is filled with sweeping paintings and dramatic sculptures. Many appear abstract, but actually depict insects, animals, birds, vegetation, people,  and land forms. These are no empty deserts! They are rich with rock holes, sand hills, bush foods ( raisins, edible mushrooms, fruits, grubs, vines, bananas, yams and much more). We see lizards, geese, shark, whale, crocadiles, kangaroos, possum, wallaby,  and also people (usually represented by an abstract shape). These paintings also use ancient and contemporary symbols to tell stories, often stories that are morality tales of appropriate behavior.

 

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

The sense of color, abstract shapes, scale, stroke, texture is a feast for the eyes, but the stories, fables, and dreams are a feast for the spirit.

 

These artists believe that the land owns them rather than the other way around. We feel their reverence as we look at these paintings.

 

 

In the photograph above, taken at the press preview, two young aboriginal artists are creating a sacred space in the first room of the exhibition.Ismail Marka and Jamie Widenmeier travelled from Australia to make sure that the more than 100 paintings and sculptures from the Levi and Kaplan  Collection (a  promised gift to the museum), would be appropriately introduced with a sacred space.

 

They created an elliptical boat- like shape in the sand. This boat represents where life and death intersect. In the boat are three hollow eucalyptus logs, each carved by a different artist and filled with symbolism. These logs are the traditional burial site for the bones of a deceased person in Amhem Land.   Near it is a video of a dance Yingapungapu envisioning the passage between life and death.

 

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

 

Another painting by a collaborative group of men, the Spinifex Men’s Collaborative is called Two Men Story. This work is one of many conceptual maps created as symbolic title deeds in a native title claim to land in West Australia in the Great Victoria Desert. It includes the story of an old snake deep under ground and father and son snakes who journey through the desert.

The details of the painting represent land forms as well as snake tracks, and ancestral myths. But this painting adds another layer to the story. The Aboriginal peoples were forced off of this land by nuclear testing and the snakes are also the tire tracks of the trucks that took them away from their land. Today, the land is, apparently, once again inhabitable. But those black tracks reach into prehistory to represent a frightening snake, and into the present to represent the invasion of people who destroyed the land.

 

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

Most of the paintings do not refer to destruction, but all of them are acts of cultural preservation, an effort to make sure that their culture does not disappear. Ricky Maynard of the Wik people, declared in 2001

“to know the meaning of culture you must recognize the limits and meaning of your own. You can see its facts but you cannot see its meaning . We share meaning by living it. Wik people have been fighting for decades for their country [ their rights were recognized in 1996] – this passage of time has come at a high cost in denial, depression and death. How could we even begin to understand the suffering – yet the people still continue with their strong beliefs of spiritual ancestry and dreaming.”

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

Two Brothers Dreaming

 

And dreaming is the overarching theme of the entire exhibition. Many of these paintings are dreams, not only of people, but of a creature like the crocodle, or a potato bush, or a kingfisher or an old woman.

promised gift of Margaret Levi and Robert Kaplan

Bush Hen Dreaming

The aboriginal artists today are creating within the longest enduring culture on the planet; they remind us of how short has been the times of destruction, our extract culture. If only we could listen to the stories and dreams of these paintings and give into to the land, instead of believing we can use it or exploit it, perhaps we have a future.

 

Something will survive our current era, but it may not be the human race. Much more likely is the extraordinary thorny devil lizard who survives in the harsh desert of Australia by drinking the dew that lands on its own spikes.

 

The alternative reality represented by these artists is compelling They may perhaps be showing us another means of survival.  They see in a desert many types of food as well as watering holes, rather than desolation or monetary wealth. Their homes are the land, rather than a structure built on top of the land,  If we can learn from that, perhaps we can survive also.