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Kapi (Waterhole) by artist Beryl De Rose
There are many types of waterholes that Anangu can use and they depend on their intimate knowledge of the environment to know where and when they will find water. Sometimes a soakage will have dried up and the women must use their digging sticks to find the water under the surface. They transport it back to their families by carrying it in wooden bowls which are carried on their heads.
Dots and lines are like the patterns of different desert vegetation types and concentric circles linked by lines can represent waterholes and river courses or the travelling and resting places of Creation Ancestors and Anangu.
Beryl De Rose is a talented Mutitjulu based artist, who has been painting with Walkatjara Art for many years, depicting local Tjukurpa stories through her beautiful, intricate artwork. Her precise dot work and colour palette is inspired by the Central Australian landscape, and over the years she has developed her style to a highly sought after level.
Beryl has been exhibiting since 2009, and in 2017 she was commissioned for the Uluru, Tili Tjuta, Field of Lights Project. She has participated in Desert Mob at the Araluen Art Centre for 4 consecutive years (2017 - 2020). In 2018, she exhibited at Artsite Sydney for the group show Kunturu Kulini (Heart Listening) communicating messages from the Uluru Statement.
10% of your Headsox Kapi design purchase price goes directly to Beryl.
There are many types of waterholes that Anangu can use and they depend on their intimate knowledge of the environment to know where and when they will find water. Sometimes a soakage will have dried up and the women must use their digging sticks to find the water under the surface. They transport it back to their families by carrying it in wooden bowls which are carried on their heads.
Dots and lines are like the patterns of different desert vegetation types and concentric circles linked by lines can represent waterholes and river courses or the travelling and resting places of Creation Ancestors and Anangu.
Beryl De Rose is a talented Mutitjulu based artist, who has been painting with Walkatjara Art for many years, depicting local Tjukurpa stories through her beautiful, intricate artwork. Her precise dot work and colour palette is inspired by the Central Australian landscape, and over the years she has developed her style to a highly sought after level.
Beryl has been exhibiting since 2009, and in 2017 she was commissioned for the Uluru, Tili Tjuta, Field of Lights Project. She has participated in Desert Mob at the Araluen Art Centre for 4 consecutive years (2017 - 2020). In 2018, she exhibited at Artsite Sydney for the group show Kunturu Kulini (Heart Listening) communicating messages from the Uluru Statement.
10% of your Headsox Kapi design purchase price goes directly to Beryl.