
Aboriginal paintings feature maps of a specific area, mythology, personal history and storytelling. Summary by Damien Parer.
Painting Country is an engaging work, offering accessible explanations of Aboriginal art. The painters are among the most respected artists in Australia and their gentle wisdom and dignity makes the viewing experience so much richer.
Balgo is a centre for Aboriginal painters in the remote north of Western Australia. The artists originally come from hundreds of kilometres around the area. They decide to go on a painting trip to their home lands after many years away. Painting Country follows the off-road vehicles on their journey as the artists recall their country and meet relations.
Notes by Damien Parer
The strength of this documentary is that it allows the audience to access the ancient philosophy framing these Indigenous artists’ works. It allows us to see that the Indigenous artists involved in this documentary are reliving and recording lived experience, knowledge and wisdom accumulated through their lifetime, and the lives of those who came before. It does this through showing us the connection with land, the responsibility of custodianship over territory and the clear understanding of boundaries in relation to land as understood and agreed upon by each artist.
The artists are able to recall landmarks with incredible accuracy and clarity, and for the audience there is a momentary glimpse into an Indigenous perspective of the land. Suddenly, land that may be seen by an outsider as rather obsolete and without familiar symbols, comes alive, and the way the artists inhabit the land as a Westerner would a house, becomes the primary focus of the film. The joy of the elders being returned to country, or the recounting of past food gathering expeditions is the essence of the art itself, and we begin to see that it is the artist’s life and cultural inheritance of wisdom and knowledge that is the basis of such beautiful works. Though the works of art may appear simple in design and composition, they are in fact gateways into another philosophical tradition and world view.
This film provides a good example of the non-linear notion of time as understood by Indigenous peoples. For example, the personal life stories of the individual artists overlap with the Dreaming stories of the Ancestors and these are re-created within the art. The idea of past and future are imbued within the present, and all narratives – past and future – are woven together through the relationship to land as represented in the artwork.
Additional notes by Romaine Moreton
This clip shows full-screen shots of Indigenous Australian paintings that are maps of the artists’ country or homeland. These paintings trace the land’s topography, but also contain personal history, mythology and the Dreaming tracks that crisscross this country. Aboriginal lawman Tjumpo Tjapanangka is shown talking about his land and demonstrating how he is able to find a living or perpetual waterhole. The clip shows that perpetual waterholes, which are essential to survival in remote regions, are recurring motifs in the paintings. It includes examples of paintings produced by Indigenous Australian artists from the Warlayirti Artists Co-operative at Balgo in Western Australia, and shows the Balgo artists journeying back to their country.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
Dot paintings depict traditional Indigenous country which is then shown in footage.
Narrator The paintings act as maps of the artist’s country, but these are not just topographical. They contain layers of mythology as well as personal history and storytelling. The interconnecting paths and circles depict ancestral travel along the ancient Dreaming tracks. Out here these Dreaming tracks go in all directions and only those who own the story or belong to that country can paint them.
A small group of Indigenous artists, accompanied by non-Indigenous arts workers, are visiting their country.
Woman 1 (subtitled) This is Kukatja country now. Ngardi country is finished. That’s the land of my family.
Woman 2 (subtitled) This is Kukatja land, not Wangkajungka.
Tjumpo Tjapanangka (subtitled) This road is mine all the way to Piparr.
Arts worker We can see that one – Piparr.
Tjumpo Yeah.
Arts worker Tjumpo is a major lawman, one of the last ones left for this area and has got very large ceremonial responsibilities from right down into Central Australia and all the way up to the north, so in great demand around the country for his knowledge and wisdom.
Tjumpo digs for water.
Tjumpo There’s water there.
Onlookers clap as water is revealed under the soil.
Man 1 Living water. It never finishes, water all the time. Summer and winter.
Narrator When people like Tjumpo look out over the land, they’re recalling where they used to walk to find water. In the desert, this knowledge of waterholes means survival and all the artists are preoccupied with it. The rockhole, soak and perpetual or living water are dominant icons in their work.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.