词条 | Yalti Napangati |
释义 |
| name = Yalti Napangati | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | birth_date = c. 1970[1] | birth_place = Marruwa, Western Australia | death_date = | death_place = | residence = Kiwirrkurra, Western Australia | nationality = Australian | other_names = Yardi, Yalti Napaltjarri {{#tag:ref|Her name is sometimes spelled Yardi, which is closer to how it sounds. Napangati is her skin name by birth, but she is sometimes written with the skin name Napaltjarri, which her "sisters" (cousins) Topsy and Takariya belong to.[2]}} | occupation = Painter | years_active = late 1980s – present | organization = Papunya Tula | notable_works = | style = Western Desert art | influences = | influenced = | spouse = Warlimpirrnga Tjapaltjarri | children = 4 | parents = {{Br separated entries|Lanti, or "Joshua" (father)|Nanu Nangala (mother)}} | relatives = {{Br separated entries|Thomas Tjapangati|Yukultji Napangati|Walala Tjapangati}} {{Br separated entries|Topsy Napaltjarri|Takariya Napaltjarri}} | awards = | footnotes = }}Yalti Napangati (born around 1970) is an Australian Aboriginal artist. She is a painter of the Western Desert style of art, and paints for the Papunya Tula school.[3] Her husband, Warlimpirrnga, is also a well-known artist. They were both members of the famous Pintupi Nine, the last group of Aborigines living a traditional way of life in Australia.[4][5] Yalti was born in the Great Sandy Desert, sometime around 1970. She and her family lived as nomads in the desert, travelling along the western side of Lake Mackay.[4] Most other Pintupi families had moved into settlements during the 1950s, but Yalti's father kept the family away from these. Her parents were Lanti (or "Joshua") and Nanu.[3] She has an older brother, Tamayinya, and a younger sister, Yukultji. She married Warlimpirrnga sometime during the early 1980s, possibly when she was as young as 12.[1] She and her family came out of the desert in 1984. She now lives at Kiwirrkurra, and has two sons and two daughters.[3] Yalti finished her first paintings for Papunya Tula in June 1996. She makes acrylic paintings of landscapes associated with Pintupi dreaming stories. Her paintings are of important places in her country, around Marruwa, Laurryi, Wirrulnga and Patjarr.[3] References1. ^1 {{cite news|title=The Last Nomads|author=Toohey, Paul|url=http://www.westerndesertdialysis.com/archives/news-reports/20040504%20The%20Bulletin%20The%20last%20of%20the%20nomads.pdf|newspaper=The Bulletin|date=4 May 2004|pages=28–35|publisher=Nine Entertainment Co.}} {{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Napangati, Yalti}}{{Australia-painter-stub}}2. ^For example, see: {{cite web|url=http://www.aboriginalartstore.com.au/aboriginal-art-culture/the-last-nomads.php|title=The Last Nomads|work=Aboriginal Art Store|accessdate=27 July 2012}} 3. ^1 2 3 {{cite book|title=Lives of the Papunya Tula Artists|url=https://books.google.com/books?ei=YTQRUJH3M6idiAfppoDYCQ|page=334|author=Johnson, Vivien|publisher=IAD Press|year=2008|location=Alice Springs}} 4. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.honeyantgallery.com/bio/178_Yalti.html|title=Yalti Napangati|publisher=Honey Ant Gallery|accessdate=27 July 2012}} 5. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/lost-tribe-happy-in-modern-world/story-e6frf7l6-1111112932308|title=Lost tribe happy in modern world|author=Adlam, Nigel|newspaper=Herald Sun|publisher=Herald & Weekly Times Pty Ltd|date=3 February 2007}} 7 : Indigenous Australian artists|Living people|Australian painters|1970s births|Pintupi|Australian women painters|21st-century women artists |
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