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Lucielle Ikara & Abigail Gurawiliwili Namundja, Manbirrbbirr (small bush flowers) Lino print fabric

Lucielle Ikara & Abigail Gurawiliwili Namundja, Manbirrbbirr (small bush flowers) Lino print fabric

Regular price $220.00 AUD
Regular price Sale price $220.00 AUD
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Artist: Lucielle Ikara & Abigail Gurawiliwili Namundja
Title: Manbirrbbirr (small bush flowers) fabric
Materials: Lino print fabric, 100% cotton
Size: 200cm x 110cm

Each unique fabric comes with an artist certificate of authenticity. 

In Kuninjku the name manbirrbbirr is used for a number of densely flowering shrubs and small trees including Verticordia cunninghamii, yellow flowering Austromyrtus species and also Acacia platycarpa which also has dense white.

Abigail has been an artist with Bábbarra Designs since 2012 and joined the Arts Worker team in 2023. She comes from a strong lineage of talented artists, including her mother, the late Jennifer Wurrkidj, and her grandmother, the late Helen Lanyinwanga. Three generations of women from Abigail’s family have worked together at the Bábbarra Women’s Centre, sharing knowledge and creating new designs. Abigail often prints linocuts from her family’s collection, carrying forward the memory and legacy of the women who came before her.

Abigail’s totems are Gungura (spiral wind), Kunwardde (stone country rocks), Yawkyawk (young woman spirit), and Kandji (Jabiru). She also honors her mother’s dreaming, Ngalyod (rainbow serpent), in her work. Abigail loves to celebrate the wildflowers of Arnhem Land in her designs.

Abigail’s Lino print fabrics are distinguished by her expert use of color, often incorporating ombré or rainbow effects that enhance the depth and vibrancy of her textile designs.

Lucielle Ikara is the grand daughter of the artist Lucy Yarawanga who is known for her quirky prints about Bawaliba, the mimih spirits that reside in the stone country. 

Lucielle started making artwork in 2022.   

This fabric was created using the linocut printing technique. The lino tile has been carved by the artist in Maningrida, and has been printed by hand using a variety of colours and layers. The linocut technique ensures each textile piece is a one-off, limited edition piece. Bábbarra Women’s Centre supports the economic independence of Indigenous women in the Arnhem Land community of Maningrida, Northern Territory, Australia. Designs created by the women at Bábbarra reflect strong cultural knowledge, which is passed down to younger generations through their textile design practice.

Bábbarra Women’s Centre has a proud history of positive social impact. Since 1983, we have supported the continuation of culture and economic independence of Indigenous women in the community of Maningrida and on surrounding homelands.

The world knows about us. We’re big. We’ve been everywhere.

Deborah Wurrkidj, artist of Bábbarra Designs

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