William Parmbuk - 'Style of Port Keats', 2024
$1,200.00
1 x 2.5 m
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’
1 x 2.5 m
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’
1 x 2.5 m
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’
The artist describes this painting as. 'My granddad taught me, I would sit down with the men and watch this style. It was on rock or bark paintings, now I do it on canvas. It’s a story about a brolga dancing and jumping around in the morning, you can see the brolga tracks. Brolga is still there in rock paintings, white dots are brolgas droppings.’