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Joe Dhamanydji: Milingimbi Art and Culture

Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world

“The law tells us what we are allowed to paint, we do not want to paint other clan’s paintings. We might get into big trouble”.

October 22, 2023
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Joe Dhamanydji is a guardian of cultural knowledge, not all of this knowledge can be shared with non-Aboriginal people. He is the proud Chairman of Milingimbi Art and Culture.

Joe’s father, the highly respected Tom Djäwa, an artist and cultural leader, travelled the 3,000 kilometres from Milingimbi in the Northern Territory to Toowoomba, Queensland in 1954 to dance for Queen Elizabeth II during her Royal visit to Australia in that year.

In July 2011, Joe and his brothers George Milaypuma and Michael Mungala, in total a group of 20 Yolngu performers and artists, travelled to Toowoomba to dance once more where Tom Djawa had danced all those years earlier.

Joe says:

“We use traditional ochres and white clay on the barks and yidaki just as our ancestors did”.

The Milingimbi Art and Culture Centre is located on the island of the same name and in the local language it is called Yurrwi. Milingimbi is located off the north coast of Arnhem Land, some 400 kilometres to the east of Darwin. The Milingimbi Art and Culture Centre’s artists create paintings on bark and canvas, sculptures and fibre art, informed by the deep cultures of the region.

The diverse culture of the region has been influenced by its proximity to Indonesia and particularly because of a long history of contact with traders from Sulawesi.

Joe’s father, the highly respected Tom Djäwa, an artist and cultural leader, travelled the 3,000 kilometres from Milingimbi in the Northern Territory to Toowoomba, Queensland in 1954 to dance for Queen Elizabeth II during her Royal visit to Australia in that year.

In July 2011, Joe and his brothers George Milaypuma and Michael Mungala, in total a group of 20 Yolngu performers and artists, travelled to Toowoomba to dance once more where Tom Djawa had danced all those years earlier.

Joe says:

“We use traditional ochres and white clay on the barks and yidaki just as our ancestors did”.

The Milingimbi Art and Culture Centre is located on the island of the same name and in the local language it is called Yurrwi. Milingimbi is located off the north coast of Arnhem Land, some 400 kilometres to the east of Darwin. The Milingimbi Art and Culture Centre’s artists create paintings on bark and canvas, sculptures and fibre art, informed by the deep cultures of the region.

The diverse culture of the region has been influenced by its proximity to Indonesia and particularly because of a long history of contact with traders from Sulawesi.

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