Namatjira Project

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The Namatjira Project is an Australian community cultural development project, launched in 2009, conducted by arts and social change company Big hART. It is based in the Aboriginal communities of Hermannsburg (NT) and Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. Its focus is the life and work of the late Albert Namatjira, an Arrernte watercolour landscape artist. The project undertakes community work and has developed an award-winning touring theatre show, Namatjira, which depicts "the commercial appropriation of Aboriginal experience".

Contents

Background

The main inspiration for the Namatjira Project was drawn from Big hART's Ngapartji Ngapartji project. In this, Elton Wirri, kinship grandson of Albert Namatjira, was a cast member in the namesake theatre show, creating an extensive painting on the backdrop of the set. [1] The reaction of audience members to the name "Namatjira" and the potential of the story to engage with contemporary Australian social issues prompted writer Scott Rankin, actor Trevor Jamieson and creative producer Sophia Marinos to research the story further. This brought them into contact with the extended Western Aranda Namatjira family. [2] The project in its form and structure was then instigated with the consent of Namatjira family representatives [3] as a way to strengthen the passing on and sharing of culture and artistic family tradition as begun by Albert Namatjira and his watercolour and landscape painting style. [4]

Namatjira (the project)

The Namatjira Project (2009-) is a community cultural development project conducted by arts and social change company Big hART in conjunction with the descendants of the late Australian Indigenous watercolour landscape artist Albert Namatjira. Based in the Aboriginal communities of Hermannsburg (NT) and Alice Springs, the project aims to strengthen intergenerational ties, to invigorate and preserve the legacy of Albert Namatjira's style of painting [5] and to invite the general public to reflect on Namatjira's story as a prism through which to explore Australia's past, present and future in terms of intercultural social relations and national reconciliation with Indigenous people. [6] The project is structured around the two pillars of community work and a touring theatre show. To help strengthen sustainable income for the next generation of Namatjira artists, Big hART partners with Ngurratjuta Many Hands Art Centre (Alice Springs) to host exhibitions of contemporary Namatjira paintings alongside the performances. [7] The project also features a digital multimedia component, with an iPhone application developed to promote the Namatjira painting style, [8] film-based workshops with the Hermannsburg School, the development of a documentary and live webcasts generated by the community and streamed from Hermannsburg (NT) as part of an exchange between the Ntaria school and Wynyard High School in Tasmania. [9]

As part of this large-scale, layered, long-term engagement with the Namatjira family and their famous ancestor's legacy, the project runs painting and digital arts workshops in the isolated Hermannsburg community, organises intergenerational plein-air painting trips on country, works with the local choir and collaborates with family members to raise awareness of Albert's story. [10] [11] On the one hand, this is done by addressing issues surrounding the copyright of Namatijra's work; [12] on the other hand, Big hART devised a professional theatre show on Albert's life in close consultation and collaboration with the family. [13]

Theatre show

As theatre critic John McCallum writes, the stage production Namatjira tells "a story about the commercial appropriation of Aboriginal experience, told in a performance that is a reappropriation of Namatjira's story by his family and descendants, who have worked with Big hART, and the company's director and writer Scott Rankin, to reclaim it". [14] In addition to help shape the story told, family members toured with the company throughout Australia as artists and performers, conducting watercolour painting workshops and creating large chalk drawings of their home country live on stage, [15] [16] while two professional actors transition between various roles [17] to relate the story of their grandfather.

The play employs both Anglo- and Indigenous theatrical conventions by combining direct address monologues with re-enactment, musical interpretation, symbolism, the use of historical source material and tight choreography. [18] The play is infused with a musical score which alternates between wind and string instruments, gospel songs in Aranda and popular music to strengthen the emotive layer of the show. [19] To parallel the portraiture of Albert Namatjira through words and stage action and to underline the centrality of the visual arts metaphor as a frame for this story, a painter creates a portrait in oil of the leading actor while the show is being performed.[ citation needed ]

Plot synopsis

The two-act play [20] tells the life story of Albert Namatjira in linked, chronological vignettes with interspersed reflections commenting on contemporary Australian discourses.

Act One speaks of Namatjira's birth in the central Australian desert and his subsequent upbringing on the Lutheran mission of Hermannsburg (NT), his elopement with his wife Rubina and the struggle to feed his family. Cultural differences between the Aranda and the Christian missionaries are playfully touched upon in scenes of Albert's early years and eventually crystallise around concepts of art, culture and economy as Albert meets painter and crippled war veteran Rex Battarbee, whose biography is juxtaposingly woven into the presentation of Albert's story. As their friendship evolves from a teacher-student relationship to one of equal engagement and artistic exchange, questions are raised regarding the state of contemporary Australian social relations. [21]

Act Two relates Albert Namatjira's continued struggle for economic sustenance and his rise to fame as artist in Australia and internationally. The story of achievement and professional recognition is expressed through the infatuation of the White Australian arts world and high society (including the young Queen Elizabeth) with the persona, cultural background and art of Albert Namatjira and his financial benefits stemming from this elevated profile. This story, however, is counterbalanced with that of racism and exploitation which is presented as endemic to the entire Australian social fabric, be it in the form of taxation without equal rights, his framing as anthropological curiosity in the minds of his admirers or the humbugging by his extended family. Albert Namatjira is presented as caught between two conflicting systems of value which in the play ultimately lead to his demise – he is jailed for supplying liquor to fellow community members and dies a broken man shortly after his release. [22] The performance of the play concludes with a video of Namatjira's descendants talking about the project's beginnings, structure and benefits for the community. [23]

Production history

Awards

Credits

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Albert Namatjira</span> Australian painter (1902–1959)

Albert Namatjira was an Arrernte painter from the MacDonnell Ranges in Central Australia, widely considered one of the most notable Australian artists. As a pioneer of contemporary Indigenous Australian art, he was arguably one of the most famous Indigenous Australians of his generation. He was the first Aboriginal artist to receive popularity from a wide Australian audience.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Indigenous Australian art</span> Art made by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia

Indigenous Australian art includes art made by Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders, including collaborations with others. It includes works in a wide range of media including painting on leaves, bark painting, wood carving, rock carving, watercolour painting, sculpting, ceremonial clothing and sandpainting; art by Indigenous Australians that pre-dates European colonisation by thousands of years, up to the present day.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hermannsburg, Northern Territory</span> Town in the Northern Territory, Australia

Hermannsburg, also known as Ntaria, is an Aboriginal community in Ljirapinta Ward of the MacDonnell Shire in the Northern Territory of Australia, 125 kilometres (78 mi); west southwest of Alice Springs, on the Finke River, in the traditional lands of the Western Arrarnta people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spinifex people</span> Aboriginal Australian people of Western Australia

The Pila Nguru, often referred to in English as the Spinifex people, are an Aboriginal Australian people of Western Australia, whose lands extend to the border with South Australia and to the north of the Nullarbor Plain. The centre of their homeland is in the Great Victoria Desert, at Tjuntjunjarra, some 700 kilometres (430 mi) east of Kalgoorlie, perhaps the remotest community in Australia. Their country is sometimes referred to as Spinifex country. The Pila Nguru were the last Australian people to have dropped the complete trappings of their traditional lifestyle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Papunya</span> Town in the Northern Territory, Australia

Papunya is a small Indigenous Australian community roughly 240 kilometres (150 mi) northwest of Alice Springs (Mparntwe) in the Northern Territory, Australia. It is known as an important centre for Contemporary Indigenous Australian art, in particular the style created by the Papunya Tula artists in the 1970s, referred to colloquially as dot painting. Its population in 2016 was 404.

The Hermannsburg School is an art movement, or art style, which began at the Hermannsburg Mission in the 1930s. The best known artist of the style is Albert Namatjira. The movement is characterised by watercolours of western-style landscapes that depict the often striking colours of the Australian outback.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arts in Australia</span> Overview of arts in Australia

The Arts in Australia refers to the visual arts, literature, performing arts and music in the area of, on the subject of, or by the people of the Commonwealth of Australia and its preceding Indigenous and colonial societies. Indigenous Australian art, music and story telling attaches to a 40–60,000-year heritage and continues to affect the broader arts and culture of Australia. During its early western history, Australia was a collection of British colonies, therefore, its literary, visual and theatrical traditions began with strong links to the broader traditions of English and Irish literature, British art and English and Celtic music. However, the works of Australian artists – including Indigenous as well as Anglo-Celtic and multicultural migrant Australians – has, since 1788, introduced the character of a new continent to the global arts scene – exploring such themes as Aboriginality, Australian landscape, migrant and national identity, distance from other Western nations and proximity to Asia, the complexities of urban living and the "beauty and the terror" of life in the Australian bush.

Ntaria Choir, formerly known as Ntaria Ladies Choir, Hermannsburg Ladies Choir, Hermannsburg Choir, and various other names, is a choir of Australian Aboriginal people from Hermannsburg in Central Australia. The members of the choir are Arrernte people from the area and they sing a mixture of English, Arrente, and Pitjantjatjara.

Daisy Jugadai Napaltjarri was a Pintupi-Luritja-speaking Indigenous artist from Australia's Western Desert region, and sister of artist Molly Jugadai Napaltjarri. Daisy Jugadai lived and painted at Haasts Bluff, Northern Territory. There she played a significant role in the establishment of Ikuntji Women's Centre, where many artists of the region have worked.

Contemporary Indigenous Australian art is the modern art work produced by Indigenous Australians, that is, Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islander people. It is generally regarded as beginning in 1971 with a painting movement that started at Papunya, northwest of Alice Springs, Northern Territory, involving Aboriginal artists such as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri and Kaapa Tjampitjinpa, and facilitated by white Australian teacher and art worker Geoffrey Bardon. The movement spawned widespread interest across rural and remote Aboriginal Australia in creating art, while contemporary Indigenous art of a different nature also emerged in urban centres; together they have become central to Australian art. Indigenous art centres have fostered the emergence of the contemporary art movement, and as of 2010 were estimated to represent over 5000 artists, mostly in Australia's north and west.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rex Battarbee</span> Australian artist

Reginald Ernest Battarbee, was an Australian artist notable for painting landscapes of Central Australia, and for teaching Aboriginal artist Albert Namatjira to paint.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Larapinta Drive</span>

Larapinta Drive is a designated state route in the Northern Territory of Australia.

Big <i>h</i>ART Australian arts company

Big hART is an Australian arts and social-justice company based in Tasmania.

Scott Rankin is an Australian theatre director, writer and co-founder and creative director of the arts and social change company Big hART. Based in Tasmania, Rankin works in and with isolated communities and diverse cultural settings, as well as in commercial performance.

Ngapartji Ngapartji was an Australian Indigenous language maintenance/revitalisation and community development project that ran between 2005 and 2010. One of its spin-off projects, a stage production of the same name co-created by Scott Rankin and Trevor Jamieson, toured Australia extensively in between 2005 and 2008.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Trevor Jamieson</span> Australian actor, singer, dancer and playwright

Trevor Jamieson is an Aboriginal Australian stage and film actor, playwright, dancer, singer and didgeridoo player.

Vincent Namatjira is an Aboriginal Australian artist living in Indulkana, in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara in South Australia. He has won many art awards, and after being nominated for the Archibald Prize several times, he became the first Aboriginal person to win it in 2020. He is the great-grandson of the Arrente watercolour artist Albert Namatjira.

The Hermannsburg Potters are a group of Aranda women who formed an arts centre in Hermannsburg, Northern Territory (Ntaria) who work with painted ceramics that draw on many influences, while strongly reflect the distinctive visual Aboriginal culture of Central Australia. Judith Inkamala is the Chair and senior member of Hermannsburg Potters Aboriginal Corporation.

Therese Ryder is an Eastern Arrernte artist from Ltyentye Apurte Community, 82 km south east of Alice Springs. Ryder, part of the Iltja Ntjarra Many Hands Art Centre, is primarily a landscape artist and paints her traditional lands in the Central Desert. Ryder is also a linguist who significantly contributed to the Central and Eastern Arrernte Dictionary (1994) and also wrote a book, Ayeye thipe-akerte: Arrernte stories about birds (2017).

Iltja Ntjarra Many Hands Art Centre, or Many Hands Art Centre, is an Aboriginal owned and directed art centre based in Alice Springs and it is home to, and has a special focus on supporting, the Hermannsburg School; the best known artist of which was Albert Namatjira. It was established in 2004 by the Ngurratjuta/Pmara Ntjarra Aboriginal Coprporation as a place for Arrernte artists to come together to "paint, share and learn new techniques". The centre is also strongly committed to improving the economic participation of its artists, ethical work practices and returning the greatest possible percentage of sales to the artist.

References

  1. Emily Dunn (1 November 2006). "The Skill of Namatjira's Grandson". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 19 December 2012. His work […] forms the backdrop for Ngapartji Ngapartji, a performance at the Sydney Opera House which tells the story of the Spinifex or Pitjantjatjara tribe of Central Australia and their encounter with atomic testing at Maralinga in the 1950s. For Ngapartji Ngapartji, one of Elton's watercolours was cut into small squares which are turned as the play progresses to reveal the landscape.
  2. "Namatjira Comes to Life". BMA Mag . September 2011. Retrieved 10 December 2011. Trevor [Jamieson] and I were touring another production, Ngapartji Ngapartji, and we'd introduce an artist on stage who was a kind grandson of Albert", he [Scott Rankin] says. "The audience would 'ohh' and 'ahhh' and it was clear there was a strong recognition of the story. As we looked into it, it became clear there were many contemporary issues contained in the story and it could provide a prism through which we could see our world and relationships between indigenous and non-indigenous people today.
  3. Anne-Marie Peard (19 August 2011). "Namatjira". Aussie Theatre. Retrieved 30 July 2012. Grandchildren of Albert Namatjira asked Big hART to share the story of their grandfather.
  4. Mike Sexton (5 June 2012). "Namatjira Still Proves a Big Artistic Hit". The Australian Broadcasting Corporation . Retrieved 10 December 2012. ...the current generation who wish to pass on the artistic inheritance of Albert Namatjira.
  5. Mike Sexton (5 June 2012). "Namatjira Still Proves a Big Artistic Hit". The Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 10 December 2012. ...the current generation who wish to pass on the artistic inheritance of Albert Namatjira.
  6. Wilkins, Peter:Brilliant Portrayal of Indigenous Icon, The Canberra Times, 16 Sep 2011 "Namatjira is a timely reminder of the journey of reparation that still lies ahead."
  7. "Namatjira Project: Preparations Hotting Up!". James Waites. 7 July 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2012. The Namatjira project is made in partnership with Ngurratjuta Many Hands Art Centre, which represents many of Albert Namatjira's descendants..
  8. Patrick McDonald (28 April 2012). "The Art of Namatjira Takes Centre Stage". The Advertiser. Retrieved 19 December 2012. Taking the project into the 21st century to explore the potential of the national broadband network in remote indigenous communities, the company has also developed an iPhone app which will enable people to paint in the style of the Namatjiras. The money from the app will go to the community and towards promoting the work in the school.
  9. Kate Prestt (20 April 2012). "Students Take Wynyard to World Via Webcast". The Advocate. Retrieved 19 December 2012. Students from Ntaria School in Hermannsburg where the Namatjira story began watched eagerly as the program went to air. The two schools have been sharing stories and next month Ntaria School will webcast its own program.
  10. "Namatjira Says Goodbye…". Arts on Tour. 8 June 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2012. This project is large, layered, and long-term and designed to leave lasting legacies beyond this touring performance piece. The Namatjira Project runs workshops in the Hermannsburg community; helps the older Namatjiras' take trips painting on country; is supporting the Hermannsburg Choir; and, is working to make a difference to the copyright issues surrounding Albert's work. It is also a celebration of the acclaimed watercolour artist Albert Namatjira's life and legacy.
  11. Mike Sexton (5 June 2012). "Namatjira Still Proves a Big Artistic Hit". The Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 10 December 2012. It seems to be paying off with the young artists staging a modest exhibition at Ntaria. And while they're learning the Namatjira style, they aren't restricted to paint and paper, thanks to a new digital program that some see as in keeping with the entrepreneurial spirit of their ancestor.
  12. Kate Herbert (17 August 2011). "Man of Colours in a Portrait Form". The Herald Sun . Retrieved 19 December 2012. The Arts Law Centre of Australia have some very interesting material on-line about the ownership of Namatjira's work – in his Writer and Director's note, Scott Rankin says "(Big hART are trying to) make a difference to the copyright issues surrounding Albert's work."
  13. Mike Sexton (5 June 2012). "Namatjira Still Proves a Big Artistic Hit". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 10 December 2012. In creating his stage production, Tasmanian playwright and director Scott Rankin consulted heavily with the Namatjira family.
  14. John McCallum (1 October 2010). "Portrait with Dance, Mime and Music". The Australian. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  15. Maynard (13 March 2012). "Albert Namatjira Workshop". ABC Newcastle. Retrieved 20 December 2012. This morning a workshop took place at the old lockup in Hunter St Newcastle. Albert Namatjira's oldest granddaughter was on hand to help young and old potential landscape artists with their technique and style. The two members of the Namatjira family paint a large landscape during the play to bring the audience into the world of Albert Namatjira.
  16. "The Namatjira Project". artsHub. 3 December 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2012. With family and community included as artists and performers in the show, this project has been […] celebrating the legacy of Australia's first Aboriginal citizen and best-known Aboriginal painter, Albert Namatjira.
  17. Tess Jaeger (26 September 2011). "Theatre – Namatjira". Human Rights in Australia. Retrieved 19 December 2012. The actors transition seamlessly between their multiple roles.
  18. "Namatjira, Big hArt & Riverside Theatres". Augusta Supple. 29 February 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2012. The play traverses several languages, combining self-aware direct address monologues with musical montage, transcripts, re-enactment, re-imaginings. [...] The script bounces between our social "white" theatre conventions and the conventions of indigenous storytelling, through re-enactment, historical primary sources, imaginings, symbolism and personal creative response by the artists telling Namatjira's story and their own story.
  19. Kieran Finnane (20 May 2012). "Two Packed Houses Get Shot in the Arm From the Play, Namatjira". Alice Springs News Online. Retrieved 19 December 2012. Then [...] we had their song and dance acts, one a disco-style love song with Lynch as Albert's heartthrob soon to be wife, Rubina; another, a [...] country and western number, that [...] gave account of the role of black stockmen in the developing pastoral industry. [...]Music on a variety of stringed and wind instruments was played by Genevieve Lacey [...]. The Ntaria Ladies Choir were also [...] singing several songs...
  20. Rankin, Scott: "Namatjira, written for the Namatjira Family, and Ngapartji Ngapartji written for the Jamieson Family", Strawberry Hill: Currency Press, 2012
  21. Jason Blake (1 October 2010). "Namatjira". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 December 2012. Act I covers his birth in 1902, to traditional Aranda parents, his childhood and youth on the Lutheran mission at Hermannsburg, near Alice Springs, and his pivotal encounter in 1934 with the crippled World War I veteran-turned-artist Rex Battarbee, whose tragicomic journey from the Western Front to the Central Desert, delivered in sketch-form, could justify another play entirely. In a profound act of cultural exchange, Namatjira opened Battarbee's eyes to his country. In return, Battarbee introduced Namatjira to representational landscape painting in watercolour.
  22. Jason Blake (1 October 2010). "Namatjira". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 December 2012. Act II follows Namatjira's rise to fame in the art world (and beyond), his becoming the first Aboriginal citizen of Australia (a scandalous example of taxation without representation) and his declining years in the 1950s: sick, despondent after a short stint in jail, and hounded to the last for money.
  23. David Jobling (7 May 2012). "Namatjira, Big hART". Australian Stage. Retrieved 19 December 2012. There is also a sort of 'afterword' screened at the very end, after the curtain call I encourage you to remain and watch.
  24. Helen Barry (4 October 2010). Namatjira, Belvoir & Big hART.{{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  25. "Namatjira". ICAF. April 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  26. Suzie Hardgrave (14 August 2011). "Namatjira". Australian Stage. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  27. "Namatjira". Canberra Theatre Centre. September 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  28. "Namatjira@IMB Theatre". Outinwollongong.com.au. September 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  29. "Rare Chance for Locals to Learn from Visiting 'Namatjira' Artists". Arts Northern Rivers/NORPA. September 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  30. "Namatjira, Big hArt & Riverside Theatres". Augusta Supple. 29 February 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  31. "The Namatjira Project". artsHub. 3 December 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  32. "Helpmann Awards® Winners". Helpmann Awards. September 2012. Archived from the original on 9 April 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  33. "2011 Award Nominations". Green Room Awards. 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  34. 1 2 "2010 – Nominations AND WINNERS". Sydney Theatre Awards. 2010. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  35. Richard Watts (17 August 2011). "Namatjira". artsHub. Retrieved 12 December 2012.