Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

24 Howie Street, SW11 4AY, London, United Kingdom
Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm


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Wed 21 Feb 2024 to Sat 13 Apr 2024

24 Howie Street, SW11 4AY Yoi

Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

Private view: Wednesday 28 February, 6pm-8pm

An exhibition of works from the Munupi Arts & Crafts Association, located along Melville Island’s north-western coastline, north of Darwin.


Installation Views

Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery Installation image for Yoi, at JGM Gallery

Featured are paintings by nine Munupi artists, each characterised and aligned by the expressive marks they employ. Often painted with natural ochres and a Pwoja Comb, these canvases possess a unique textural materiality. At first glance, they are seemingly asemic in appearance. For example, Alison Puruntatameri’s Winga, meaning Tidal Movement or Waves, alludes to the rhythmic movement of the natural world. The result, free from a mimetic representation of reality, is inherently abstract in form.

This expression of gestural energy offers a unique insight into the movement of the artist and, by extension, the human presence, out of which art emerges; the artist’s mark carries the testimony of its author and thus the identity of the artist themself.

Delving deeper into the mark-making techniques of Tiwi Art, one finds that they emanate a distinctly spiritual presence. Dancing, or yoi, plays a large part of life on the Tiwi Islands. Depictions of concentric circular motifs, as featured in Josephine Burak’s Milimika, outline the ceremonial dancing ground. Narrative dances are a key feature of ritual activity. They can depict both everyday life and historically significant events. During these dances, the participants paint their bodies with natural ochres, using designs that also appear on the canvases in Yoi. Once again, this brings into direct dialogue, movement and narrative, the body and language. In the words of Judith Ryan (Art and Australia, 1997): “For Tiwi people, to sing is to dance is to paint.”

The paintings in this exhibition all share a common thread. In Tiwi culture, dance is established as corporeal communication. In a somewhat parallel motion, the canvases display gesture. Contrary to the venture of many Western painters, the finished product invites the viewer to savour and enjoy the movement which led to the artwork's creation.

Exhibiting artists include: Alison Puruntatameri, Arthur John Cowell, Carol Puruntatameri, Christine Puruntatameri, Delores Tipuamantumirri, Dorothy Noni Poantimului, Josephine Burak, Lucinda Puruntatameri and Simplicia Tipungwuti.

all images © the gallery and the artist(s)

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