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The truth in painting: cultural artefacts as proof of native title

Author: K. Anker (University of Sydney)

  • The truth in painting: cultural artefacts as proof of native title

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    The truth in painting: cultural artefacts as proof of native title

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Abstract

On the front cover of the Oxford Companion to Aboriginal Art and Culture an Aboriginal man in a red loin cloth appears dancing on a brightly coloured canvas. He is dwarfed by the size of the painting, and is doubly lost amid the 'riotous colour', the lines, circles and swirls of his platform, the Ngurrara Canvas II. This is Nyilpirr Spider Snell, an artist from the Kimberley/Great Sandy Desert region of North Western Australia, performing the Kurtal -- or snake dreaming dance -- in Canberra to 'remind those sitting on the High Court of the depth of [his peoples'] claim' (Native Title Newsletter 2002: 4).

How to Cite:

Anker, K., (2005) “The truth in painting: cultural artefacts as proof of native title”, Law Text Culture 9(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.14453/ltc.540

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Published on
01 Jan 2005