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Docker River Bush Westside
$215.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
That black horse (nyanthu) is lookin for water, 2023
$660.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
All the People swimming in water at Docker River side
$935.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
Brumby Lookin for Water, 2023
$935.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
People Goin’ Walk, 2022
$935.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
Billy Kenda Tjampijinpa going for a walk to see country side. Papa chasing me!
$475.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
This River’s Comin’ From West
$900.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
Man Showin’ His Country Side
$635.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
Kookaburra Lookin’ for Family, 2017
$675.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
People Swimmin’ at Glen Helen, 2017
$670.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
Father and Son
$335.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists -
sold
Horse gone to drink the water – plane going up in the sky
$215.00 Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artists
Billy Tjampitjinpa Kenda
Bindi Mwerre Anthurre ArtistsBilly Kenda is from Jay Creek in Tjoritja, the West MacDonnell Ranges, his Mothers country. His father was a Ngaatjatjarra man from Docker River. Billy started painting in the Bindi Mwerre Anthurre Artist Studio in 2004. Primarily painting Jay Creek, Billy creates landscapes where the various textures of rocks and flora play against each other in vivid pattern. Billy’s ability to evoke the beauty of the Central Desert in his paintings demonstrates his strong connection to the land.
Billy speaks about the history of painting in his family:
“My grandfather been telling me to paint. Long time ago…. he painted. He been teaching me about painting when I was a young boy. He liked to paint countryside. Bill Okai… My mother, Mona Okai, she was painting, she painted anything, she painted dot work. She been pass away, long time ago.”
Billy’s graphic style of painting has a sense of calm and balance within. Drawing inspiration from the increasing population and traffic within the Central Desert Region, Billy started adding trucks and cars to his landscapes in 2008. Soon after followed aeroplanes, helicopters and even the odd flying saucer, adding to the playful nature of his work.
“I always see lotta cars, at Jay Creek, Hermannsburg road… That’s what I’m thinking about. I think about all them cars. I seen all them tourists driving through to Standley Chasm… stop out there, see them kangaroos… long time ago.”
Interacting with these subjects are the animals that have always been there – the kangaroos, the emus, the lizards, the eagles. They look on from a perch on a rock or from the shade of a tree; they flee from oncoming traffic. They function as observers and survivors of this changing place.
More recently Billy has been depicting scenes of remote communities and town camps, as the scope of his work continues to expand to encompass all things unique to Central Australia.