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Birrikitji Gumana Yirrkala Bark Painter

Birrikitji Gumana was a renowned bark-painting artist and a leader of the Yolngu people. He was the father of another famous Aboriginal Artist, Gawirrin Gumana. The aim of this article is to assist readers in identifying if their aboriginal bark painting is by Birrikitji Gumana. It compares examples of his work.

 

If you have a Birrikitji Gumana bark painting to sell please contact me. If you want to know what your Birrikitji Gumana painting is worth to me please feel free to send me a Jpeg. I would love to see it.

 

 

 

Style

Birrikitji bark paintings often have large monochrome figures or Totemic animals. These figures in panels of painted rarrk. His son Gawirrin has a similar style and shares the same totemic animals. Birrikitji also painted barks depicting Macassan Prau (sailing vessels). These barks of Prau are often complete with their crews. He also painted several bark paintings of stingrays. These diamond shaped stingrays painted to become part of the rarrk design.

This diamond-shaped design is the property of the Dalwangu clan of the Yirritja Moiety and has its own story. The ancestral hero Laintjun came out of the sea in the Dreaming with the sea foam forming the diamond patterns on his body.  Laintjun taught the Dalwangu Clan how to paint the diamond pattern and the meaning of them.  When Laintjun first arrived from the sea as an ancestral spirit, he assumed a human form.  He later searched the Arafura swamp and found and ate the “Sacred Honey Comb” and so became a spirit man.  In time he became the greatest warrior and hunter in all Arnhem Land.  When he came out of the sea he brought with him all the Yirritja totems and distributed them to all the Yirritja Clans.

The diamond pattern represents the sea foam on Laintjun’s body, the Sacred Honeycomb and water rippling through the sticks of the fish trap.

Birrikitji is also known to have carved and painted at least one hardwood Aboriginal Sculpture.

Biography

His birth date is often incorrectly given as 1898, but he was much older than that. He recalled how he had discovered the bodies of the Yolngu killed by a police party at the Gangan massacre that happened around 1911. When the Yirrkala mission station started in 1935 he was already well into middle age. He was a man of enormous authority and a leader of Yirritja moiety ceremonies.

In his early days, he lived with his people around Blue Mud Bay. Birrikitji painted at the newly established missions at Groote Eylandt and Rose River. He moved and settled at Yirrkala in the late 1950s. By this time he the most eminent Yirritja moiety Lore man as well as a noted warrior, dancer, and song man. He painted the lower section of the Yirritja side of the Yirrkala Church Panels.

Other Artists involved in the painting of the church panels include Matarman and Narritjin and Mitinari

Birrikitji is sometimes spelled as Birrikidja, Birrikidji or even Birrakitja.

All images in this article are for educational purposes only.

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Yirrkala Artworks and Articles

Birrikitji Gumana Bark Painting images

The following images are not a complete list of the artist’s works but give a very good idea of his style and variety.

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