• Mina Mina (Bush Food Dreaming)
  • Mina Mina (Bush Food Dreaming)

Judy Nambia Martin

Mina Mina (Bush Food Dreaming)


Regular price   

  • Synthetic Polymer Paint on Canvas, stretched and framed 
  • 400mm x 300mm
  • Cat No. 520-23

Napangardi was born on her lands around 1939. These were the lands of her father and grandfathers. Her other Dreaming sites are Minamina near Lake Mackay. Her father Japanangka passed away shortly after she was born. He passed away in his lands. Her Mother, Lorna Fencer Napurrurla or Yulyurlu, her real name, raised Judy in the bush. She spent her formative years in the bush until some white people rounded the family up against their will and took them to Yuendumu. Judy thinks the problem was the gold at the site now called the Granites. Many of the family ended up addicted to alcohol in Alice Springs but Judy never drank. Judy had 8 brothers and sisters and three daughters. She has six surviving grandchildren.

Selected Exhibitions:

  • Ngurra Mala - Les Lieux du Reve, Ecole des beaux-arts, Grenoble, France (1991)
  • Yapa, Peintres Aborigenes De Balgo et Lajamanu - Baudoin Lebon Gallery, Paris (1991)
  • Aboriginal Olympic Exhibition - Phillip Morris, Lausanne (1998) 
  • Warnayaka Warlpiri - Karen Brown Gallery, Darwin (1998)
  • Lajamanu Womens Artists, Coo-ee, Sydney (2000)
  • Artists of Lajamanu - Tandanya, Adelaide  (2000)
  • Yilpinji, Love, Magic and Ceremony - Japingka Gallery, Fremantle (2003)
  • Alcheringa Gallery, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada (2003)
  • Judy Napangardi Martin - Japingka Gallery, Fremantle (2005)

Lajamanu Community, formerly named Hooker Creek, is 580kms south west of Katherine, Northern Territory. Lajamanu is half way between Alice Springs and Darwin to the west near the NT/WA border. The town is very remote, with a population of around 900 Warlpiri people.

Warnayaka Art is staffed mainly by the children of the older generation of Indigenous Lajamanu residents who remember their first contact with white Australia. They maintain the computerised data base and run the art centre production. Older and younger community members produce Aboriginal dot paintings and make wooden artefacts. The centre is a place for a cup of tea and a song and dance, and then a trip into the Spinifex desert to look for goanna and lizards or to collect bush coconut, bush banana, yams and bush honey from native bees.

Best efforts are made to get your purchase on its way within 2 business days. Postage from Darwin can be slow so please bear with us! 

All works are packed securely to protect during shipping. All items valued over $100 are insured for damage during transit. 

If you are purchasing multiple works, please email us for custom shipping rates. 

Items purchased online that are part of an exhibition will be shipped at the end of the exhibition period.