Betty Mbitjana

Awelye & Bush Melon
Artist
Betty Mbitjana
About artist
Artwork

Created Year: 2006
Medium: Acrylic (Synthetic Polymer)
Genre: Aboriginal
Size: 196 × 120cm
Investment Grade: Speculative
Colour Palette: Bright
Catalogue: ABBM2RC
Certified Valuation
$7,000.00
Sale Price
$7,000.00
SOLD
Awelye & Melon Dreaming
Artist
Betty Mbitjana
About artist
Artwork

Created Year: 2010
Medium: Acrylic (Synthetic Polymer)
Genre: Aboriginal
Size: 297 × 190cm
Investment Grade: Speculative
Colour Palette: Bright
Catalogue: ABBM3RC
Certified Valuation
$13,000.00
Sale Price
$13,000.00
SOLD
Betty was born c.1950 in Utopia. She is the daughter of renowned artist Minne Pwerle and the sister of artist Barbara Weir. She is married to Paddy Club. She paints the awelye, bush berry and bush plum dreaming. Betty's mother and other women used to collect these fruits, cut them up into pieces and skewer them on a piece of wood and dry them to be eaten in times when bush tucker was scarce.

Betty's paintings depict the designs that the women would paint on their bodies, and the dancing tracks which are made in the sand during women's (awelye) ceremony. Through their awelye ceremonies, women pay homage to their ancestors, show respect for their country and dance out their collective maternal role within their community. A design based on these dancing tracks is painted on women's bodies before a ceremony is performed, and this same design can be seen today in Betty's works on canvas and in the works of her mother, sisters, and aunts. Ochre, charcoal and ash are all used to paint designs on the women's upper bodies, and Pwerle women paint their chests, breasts and upper arms for awelye in ochre, red and white. The designs they use have been passed down for many generations, and only the Pwerle or Kemarre owners can paint them.

Betty's works are highly collectable and prices are similar to prices for her famous mother Minnie Pwerle.