John Prince Siddon

Mangkaja Arts Resource Agency

John Prince Siddon is the son of Pompey Siddon, who was one of the founding painters at Mangkaja Arts Resource Agency in Fitzroy Crossing W.A in 1991. A Walmajarri man, he was born in 1964 in Derby, and spent his early years working on cattle stations until injured in a horse-riding accident.
He now lives in Fitzroy Crossing and is married with a 16-year-old son. Prince has been painting with Mangkaja since 2009. However due to his wife’s chronic illness and his son having special needs, he has had limited time to devote to his art. Working out of his bedroom

“Just like I said, paintings bring memories. Back whatever young or old. When you start to paint, you’ll never stop! Many of our old people did most painting of their own on their own land, they love even the animals.
Well to me, I’m doing the same, trying to piece every animal whatever where they from; East, West, South, North- trying to paint them together. Like mix them up, just like a jigsaw. I paint animals who fight each other, hate each other, and sometimes love each other.

You know, back when I was young teen, I loved horse riding. But we were forced to work on cattle stations, as juveniles our punishment was to go to the stations and work. We used to steal back then- cars, booze, smokes, money, you name it. Young or old, when you start you will never stop. These are my words; these paintings are my words.
Landscape, dreamtime, stories, kids’ paintings, poetry……put them all together, its all the same with all my painting it’s all mixed up.

I really don’t know how to translate it into words but I can by doing art. I’m a shy person, yeah. Also, all my art stories are shy, yeah anyways, life goes on, whatever.”
Prince’s narrative formula stems from the traditional Kimberley craft of boab nut carving. He is not an overnight success but has worked hard at his craft and is continually exploring new mediums and ways of working his painted surfaces. Moving between 2D and 3D surfaces he renders confronting imagery inspired by national and global issues he sees on television, his own story and desert iconography and the Narrangkarni (Dreamtime) Finally the hard work is paying off with Prince attaining some major career achievements. Selected as a regular finalist in the prestigious Telstra NATSIAA since 2018 and highly commended in the King Wood and Mallesons Art Prize 2018.

February 2020 saw John Prince Siddon commissioned for his first major solo show by the Perth International Festival with “All Mixed Up”. A survey of works that demonstrated Prince’s adeptness for pushing mediums on multiple surfaces and rendering imagery that reflects a unique take on today’s national political and social issues. SMH Art Critic John McDonald named it “the festival standout exhibition.”

“Prince’s works are incredibly detailed and often contain rich layers of symbolic imagery. In the work, Mix It All Up, Prince uses a map of this Nation’s to depict several pivotal scenes in the nation’s history. Upon closer inspection, the work references colonisation and immigration and their effects on native flora, fauna and Aboriginal communities. Other works in the exhibition look at Indigenous land management, global warming, renewal and regeneration of bush and even brutality and violet pub culture.” Fremantle Art Centre Perth Festival Media Release

EXHIBITIONS
SOLO
2020 Hatching Time Chapman and Bailey, Melbourne, Vic
2020 All Mixed Up-Perth International Festiva,l Fremantle Art Centre WA

2018 Hunting Season Chapman and Bailey, Melbourne, Vic

GROUP SHOWS
2020 Sydney Contemporary 2020, Sydney Contemporary Presents
2020 Creative Growth Artists,  Outsider Art Fair NYC

2019 Meeting Places Mangkaja and Creative Growth, Creative Growth, Oakland, CA

2019 Parranga -Hot Dry Season, Outstation Gallery, Darwin, NT
2019 Unbranded   La Trobe Institute, Bendigo, Vic

2019 Desert River Sea, Portraits of the Kimberley Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth WA

2017 When the Sky Fell PIAF, WA
2017 Bunbury Biennale Bunbury, WA
2017 Sharks and Shamans PSAS GALLERY, PERTH WA

2016 Short St Gallery Broome, WA

2015 Revealed Fremantle Art Centre, Perth, WA Linden Art Gallery, Melbourne, VIC
2015 New Frontiers

ART PRIZES

2021/ 2020/2019/2018  TELSTRA NATSIAA Finalist MAGNT DARWIN, NT
2018 Port Hedland Art Prize, Courthouse Gallery, Port Hedland
2018 King Wood and Mallesons Highly Commended NSW PARLIAMENT HOUSE Sydney, NSW

2015 Western Australian Indigenous Art Award, Art Gallery of WA

COLLECTIONS

Art Gallery of Western Australia
Art Gallery of South Australia
Art Bank