17. Dhuḏuthuḏu (Frog Mouth Owl)
Dhuḏuthuḏu is the name for the frogmouth owl which I carve. It belongs to the Dhuwa Moiety, the Ḏäṯiwuy and Ŋaymil clan, they sing about the owl and the song joins the two clans together. They also connect to Gälpu and Djambarrpuyŋu through this law. Its country is near Yäŋunbi and is known as Warrathiri or Munumbal. Elders have said that it is not deep law but just something that they sing and dance.
- Ochre on Milkwood
- Dimensions: 28 x 8cm
- Cat No. 24-38
Judy Manany is an accomplished artist working from Elcho Island Arts, whose work practice includes painting, carving, and weaving. She is the daughter of Mithinarri Gurruwiwi, a very well-known bark painter who she was very close to. Manany would watch and learn from him as they visited country and he painted.
“My name is Judy Manany Gurruwiwi. My clan is Galpu and my Moiety is Dhuwa. I learnt to make art from my father who I assisted from when I was 10 years old. I collected materials for him. We made hollow logs, yidaki, bark paintngs and carving. I learnt how to make my own art with my own ideas when my father passed away.
I was born in Yirrkala in 1962 and moved to Elcho Island in 1981. I make string bags, weaving, spears, hollow logs, painting, carving, yidaki and womera. All types of art. I paint my totems which are python, file snake (freshwater snake), water lilies and bidum (a sucker fish which attaches itself to File snakes). The dots in my work are Dhuwa patterns which represent the rainbow colours that reflect off the file snakeskin. The crosshatch patterns represent fresh water.
My sister Susan also makes artwork, the same as me. She also helped our father and now she helps me with my art. My older brother (deceased) advised me on what to paint, what I am allowed to show. I have one daughter, one son, one grandson and two granddaughters and they live with me in Galiwin’ku.
My children help me collect the materials for my artwork and prepare the ochre. I started making soft sculpture animals with pandanus in 2008. I experimented with new ways of weaving to make fish, turtles, camp dog, piggy, pussy cat, echidna, and owl. Now people really like these, and we have many exhibitons with soft sculpture and carvings”.
I work as a casual Arts Workers at Elcho Island Arts. I like to teach students at the local school about art.
Elcho Island Arts is a Yolŋu-owned art centre located in Galiwin’ku, Elcho Island off the north-east coast of East Arnhem Land. Community-operated since 1992, the art centre exists primarily to support Yolŋu artists to share their culture and derive income from their art making.
The community’s artists are renowned for their originality in design and knowledge of traditional bush materials, continuing a tradition of many thousands of years. Their artworks, weavings, fibre art, carvings and ceremonial poles are widely exhibited and are in national collections within Australia and in major collections worldwide. Types of works produced and exhibited in the art centre include Morning Star poles, larrakitj or Dupan, bark paintings, yidaki (didjeridu), woven pandanus baskets, carvings and shell jewellery. Their fibre art is certainly worth a look, with grasses and fibres dyed and woven together to form baskets, dilly bags, mats, fishing nets and jewellery.
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