Jean Baptiste Apuatimi

Jean Baptiste Apuatimi (1940-2013) is internationally acclaimed as a painter, carver and printmaker. She was born at Pirlangimpi, Melville Island, NT, into the Japijapunga (March Fly) skin group. In 1991 she participated in her first exhibition; the next year the National Gallery of Victoria acquired eight of her bark paintings. Apuatimi exhibited widely and earned significant recognition as both an artist and a custodian of Tiwi culture. Her work is held in public and private collections around the world, including the British Museum (UK), the Seattle Museum of Art (USA) and the National Museum of Women in the Arts (USA).

Black and white portrait of an Indigenous woman with a patterned painted background.

Jean Baptiste Apuatimi. Photo: Tiwi Designs.

Fabric laid out with soft folds printed with First Nations artwork in a pale green colour with white cross-hatched lines and dots.

Jilamara in ‘Sea Green’, printed on our Indoor Weave fabrication, from the Tiwi Collection.

Apuatimi's design for our Tiwi Collection is called Jilamara. Jilamara is a Tiwi word that refers to the ochre patterning traditionally painted on the bodies of dancers and on carved poles during Pukumani ceremonies. Jilamara is unique to the art and culture of Tiwi Islanders.

Assortment of patterned fabric swatches arranged on a table, featuring various designs and colours including green, brown, beige, white.

Jilamara in ‘Sea Green’,‘Baked Clay’ and ‘Pink Ochre’, on our Indoor Weave fabric.

Next
Next

Leanne Black