Emily kam kngwarreye biography children
Emily kame kngwarreye cause of death
By the time she passed away on September the 2nd her fame had achieved mythic status. By this time comparisons with a number of great international artists including Pollock, Kandinsky, Monet and Matisse, had become commonplace. Emily was an artistic superstar, the highest paid woman in the country, who created one of the most significant artistic legacies of our time.
As a painter Emily was a bold, unselfconscious force unleashing colour and movement on to canvases that at their best could be sublime. Her finest paintings are entirely intuitive works, painted during furious sessions in which she never stepped back to look. Her forceful independent personality coupled with the strength she developed while working with camels and labouring during her earlier life was clearly evident as she painted.
She worked as if possessed, drawing long meandering lines and bashing out fields of dots with her exceptionally strong hands and arms, displaying her ability to use the most unlikely overlays of colours to create deeply luminous works. Like Pollock she painted on the ground but, unlike him, she crouched over the canvas until done.
She was renowned for walking away from a canvas without even surveying the finished product, such was her assuredness about its content and meaning. Those who knew her well describe her as having a strong personality, ready to have a good time and certainly not a frail old woman being manipulated, as some would have it, by dealers and art advisers.
Deep down, her principle self-identity was as a contemporary artist with a deep commitment to looking after her country. Like her Anmatyerre clanswomen, Emily participated in ceremony Awelye to make herself happy. She loved getting her hands into the paint as much as the brush when attacking the canvas. Paintings produced in summer were usually more colourful and highly charged with energy than those done in the dry season due to the keyed up expectation of rain, the excitement of its arrival and the explosive flowering of the desert.
Born circa at Soakage Bore Alhalkere on the north west boundary of Utopia, Emily first met white people as a young girl aged about nine. The adopted daughter of Jacob Jones, an important law man in the Alyawarre community, she spent her younger days as a camel driver and stock hand on pastoral properties at a time when most girls worked as domestics.
Married twice, Emily lived with her family at Alalgura and later with her husband at Woodgreen Station.