Raylene Walatinna Australian, Yankunytjatjara, b. 1980
Ngayuku Ngura (My Country), 2024
acrylic on linen
152 x 167 cm
23-24
Raylene's paintings are informed by her family's strong connection to country and their history (both their ancestral Yankunytjatjara cultural history and more recent family history) associated with the rugged desert...
Raylene's paintings are informed by her family's strong connection to country and their history (both their ancestral Yankunytjatjara cultural history and more recent family history) associated with the rugged desert country around Indulkana, on the APY Lands.
Raylene Walatinna is the daughter of Betty Chimney, a senior woman and established painter.
Raylene's artistic practice has been guided by the influence of her mother and in recent years Betty and Raylene have been working together on large-scale collaborative paintings. Through the process of working together with her daughter on collaborative paintings, Betty continues the tradition of older women passing on their important knowledge of Tjukurpa (Anangu cultural stories) and Ngura (Country) to younger women.
Raylene is also a mother, and recently a grand-mother and is proud to be continuing this important cultural tradition.
Raylene Walatinna is the daughter of Betty Chimney, a senior woman and established painter.
Raylene's artistic practice has been guided by the influence of her mother and in recent years Betty and Raylene have been working together on large-scale collaborative paintings. Through the process of working together with her daughter on collaborative paintings, Betty continues the tradition of older women passing on their important knowledge of Tjukurpa (Anangu cultural stories) and Ngura (Country) to younger women.
Raylene is also a mother, and recently a grand-mother and is proud to be continuing this important cultural tradition.