This is my land, this is my sea, this is who I am.Sally Gabori
Image gallery
Considered one of the greatest contemporary Australian artists of the past two decades, Sally Gabori began painting in 2005, around the age of eighty, and rapidly achieved national and international renown as an artist. In just a few short years of a rare creative intensity, and prior to her death in 2015, she developed a unique, vibrantly colorful body of work with no apparent ties to other aesthetic currents, particularly within contemporary Aboriginal painting. Bringing together some thirty monumental paintings, this exhibition is organized in close collaboration with the artist’s family and the Kaiadilt community, alongside the foremost specialists in Kaiadilt art and culture. They will be present in Paris for its opening to pay tribute to this artist, whose work continues to fascinate for its spontaneous, luminous, and profoundly original character.
Image gallery
Kaiadilt, A Life in Exile
Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori was born c.
1924 on Bentinck Island, in the Gulf of Carpentaria, off
the coast of far-north Queensland, Australia. She was a
Kaiadilt woman who spoke Kayardilt language. Her name,
Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda, comes from the Kaiadilt
tradition, which stipulates that everyone is named according
to their place of birth and their totemic ancestor. Therefore,
Mirdidingkingathi indicates that Sally Gabori was born at
Mirdidingki, a small creek located in the south of Bentinck
Island, and that her “totem animal” is juwarnda or dolphin.
Largely isolated, with a population of 125 in 1944,
the Kaiadilt were the last Aboriginal people of coastal
Australia to establish lasting ties with the European.
Sally Gabori and her family lived a traditional lifestyle,
relying almost entirely upon their island’s natural
resources. Like most women, she was in charge of fishing,
maintaining the stone fish-traps that dotted the shores of
the island, and of weaving natural fibers into baskets.
From the early 1940s onwards, the Presbyterian missionaries
who in 1914 had settled on Mornington Island, to the north
of Bentinck Island, tried unsuccessfully to convince the
Kaiadilt to join their mission. Their attempts were in vain.
However in 1948, following a cyclone and a tidal wave that
flooded a large part of Kaiadilt land and contaminated
their fresh water supplies, the 36 last surviving Kaiadilt
residents, including Sally Gabori and all of her family, were
evacuated to the Presbyterian mission on Mornington Island.
This exile, which they believed would only be temporary,
would ultimately last for several decades. When they arrived
on Mornington, the Kaiadilt were housed in camps along
the beach and the children were separated from their parents
and installed in dormitories within the mission. They were
forbidden from speaking their mother tongue, resulting in a
fracture from their culture and traditions.
From the 1990s onwards, after many years of struggle for
the recognition of Aboriginal land rights, Australia passed
legislation which finally recognized the rights of the Kaiadilt
to their land. A small outstation was established at Nyinyilki
on Bentinck Island, allowing those Kaiadilt who so wished,
including Sally Gabori, to return to their native island and
stay there temporarily.
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Painting Her Native Island
Sally Gabori began painting in 2005, at over eighty years of
age. Her paintings, although abstract in appearance, are as
much topographical references as they are stories with a deep
signification for her, her family, and her people. They are a
celebration of different places on her native island, some of
which Sally Gabori and members of her family linked to these
places through their names, did not visit for almost forty years.
The places she paints are also associated with the political
struggle for the recognition of Kaiadilt land rights.
Beyond Kaiadilt iconographic tradition, Sally Gabori’s
paintings bear witness to a boundless imagination and
audacious freedom of invention, nourished by the infinite
variations of light on the landscape, caused by the
dramatically changeable weather on the Gulf of Carpentaria.
Boasting combinations of colours, an interplay of forms,
textured painterly surfaces, and different formats, Sally Gabori
painted over 2,000 canvases over the nine years of her artistic
career, exploring the multiple resources of pictorial expression
in a seemingly short space of time.
Sally Gabori initially worked on a small scale, painting with
a thin brush and undiluted colours. In 2007, she transitioned
to monumental canvases over six metres long, losing none
of the vigour of her gesture or audacity in the use of
colour. That same year, inspired by a first return visit to her
homeland, Sally Gabori went to considerable lengths to map
on canvas the numerous places dear to her. She produced
three collaborative paintings over six meters in length, with
her sisters and nieces, all born on Bentinck Island before
the exodus. Towards the end of her career, she also painted
a number of large pieces with her daughters, Amanda and
Elsie, and encouraged her other daughters, Dorothy and
Helena, to join the Mornington Island Arts and Crafts Centre.
After her death in 2015, the Queensland Art Gallery |
Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, and then the National
Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne presented a large
retrospective of her work in 2016 and 2017. Her paintings
are now featured in some of Australia’s most important
public collections.
An Exhibition of Discovery
This exhibition at the Fondation Cartier presents some
thirty canvases by Sally Gabori, including spectacular
monumental canvases that punctuated her career, as well
as three collaborative paintings done with other Kaiadilt
artists, including her daughters. Thanks to some exceptional
loans from major Australian galleries such as Queensland
Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, National Gallery
of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of
New South Wales and HOTA, Home of the Arts, as well as
Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac, and generous
loans by private lenders, the exhibition allows the public
to discover an immense colourist whose corpus, profoundly
anchored in the history of her people, bears witness to a
remarkable pictorial modernity.
To coincide with this ambitious exhibition of paintings,
conducive to contemplation and reflection, the Fondation
Cartier, in close collaboration with Sally Gabori’s family and
the Kaiadilt community, has created a website dedicated to
the life and work of the artist. It showcases her rich work
and the important cultural legacy she has left to successive
Kaiadilt generations. Through countless documents and
accounts collected in Australia for this exhibition, this site is
the most exhaustive archive ever compiled on the history of
Sally Gabori and the Kaiadilt people..
Online project dedicated to Sally Gabori
To accompany the first solo exhibition of Australian Aboriginal artist Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori outside of Australia, the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain is showcasing the life and work of the artist through an online, immersive project, accessible to everyone at: sallygabori-fondationcartier.com