Jump to content

Wenten Rubuntja

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from W. Rubuntja)

Wenten Rubuntja
Bornc. 1926
Burt Creek, Northern Territory, Australia
DiedJuly 2005
Northern Territory, Australia
NationalityArrernte
Known forWatercolour painting, contemporary Indigenous Australian art
SpouseCynthia
AwardsMember of the Order of Australia

Wenten Rubuntja AM (c.1926 – July 2005) was an Aboriginal Australian artist. His early watercolour paintings are typical of the Hermannsburg School of art, while his later work includes dot painting. He was also an Aboriginal rights activist who worked on the Central Land Council in the Northern Territory for several years.

Early life

[edit]

Wenten Rubuntja has said that he was born in between 1923 and 1928 (therefore estimated at 1926)[a] in Burt's [sic] Creek, north of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia.[1] Burt Creek is a tiny community known as an outstation.[2][3] He was the son of goatherd Bob Rubuntja, and had a brother, Ambrose. He was an Arrernte man, of the subsection (skin) Pengarte.[1] Bob Rubuntja helped postmaster and anthropologist Frank Gillen, who wrote detailed accounts of Arrernte culture.[4]

Acclaimed watercolour painter Albert Namatjira was his father's cousin.[1]

As a young man, Rubuntja was taken to Mount Hay, the traditional land of his father, where he was entrusted with the Fire Dreaming story that was part of his cultural heritage.[5] He grew up around the town camps of Alice Springs, where many missionaries were active, and he was baptised by Catholic, Lutheran, and possibly other missionaries. He attended mission schools briefly, but did not learn to read or write. He did however adapt the Christian world view with his own Arrernte traditional spirituality.[5]

In the early 1940s he lived at the Little Flower Catholic Mission near Alice Springs, before moving to a location near The Bungalow, an institutional home for Aboriginal children, in 1945.

Early work

[edit]

As a young man, he worked as a stockman, and rode as a jockey at the Hermannsburg Races.[6] During World War II, he hunted kangaroos to feed the troops, and also performed menial jobs on cattle stations that were open to Aboriginal people.[5]

Career

[edit]

Rubuntja's life changed after seeing his uncle Albert Namatjira at work, and he decided to turn to painting and advocacy for his community.[6] He began painting in the 1950s,[5] and more seriously in the 1960s.

Advocacy, activism, and community work

[edit]

In 1975, Charlie Perkins was elected as first chair of the Central Land Council chair, and Rubuntja as his deputy.[6] He served as chairman of the Central Land Council in 1976-1980 and 1985-88.[5]

In 1976 he led over 1,000 Aboriginal people through Alice Springs demanding the passage of the Land Rights Act proposed (and passed that year) by the Liberal government led by Malcolm Fraser, and followed that up by touring the country addressing crowds on the topic.[5] In 1988, Rubuntja and Galarrwuy Yunupingu presented Prime Minister Bob Hawke with the Barunga Statement (painted by Runbuntja and several others[1]), which called for a treaty, at the Barunga Festival in Barunga.[6] Rubuntja played a key part in protecting many sacred sites in and around Alice Springs.[5]

Partly due to his efforts, the Federal Court of Australia recognised native title for the Arrernte people over large areas around Alice Springs in 2000 - the first time that Aboriginal people had been given title over municipal land.[5]

Rubuntja was a skilled negotiator, being able to integrate Indigenous and non-Indigenous concepts in a way that brought resolutions that satisfied all parties.[5][7]

He was a member of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation in 1991 and 1995.[5] He co-founded Tangentyere Council, which provided tenure and essential services for Alice Springs town camps, and he also played a role in the founding of Yipirinya School and the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress.[7]

Art practice

[edit]
Black Snake Dreaming (1978)

Rabuntja worked at a camp called Yarrenyty Arltere, on the western side of the MacDonnell Ranges.[6] He painted in two main styles: in that of the Hermannsburg School (Namatjira) style, and, later dot painting, after Papunya Tula[6] developed the style in the 1970s. He believed that both styles expressed his connection to Country and his spirituality:[5]

Doesn't matter what sort of painting we do in this country; it still belongs to the people, all the people. This is worship, work, culture. It's all Dreaming.

He painted traditional symbols, such as boomerangs, spears, lizards, and snakes, and a recurrent theme in his paintings was about finding one's way.[1] Through the 1970s, as the older artists died, the Hermannsburg School dwindled, but Rubuntja continued to paint in this style through to the 1990s.[1]

His earliest known watercolour was painted between 1956 and 1960, and is in the Flinders University Art Museum in Adelaide.[1]

For the Australian Bicentenary in 1988, the Araluen Arts Centre in Alice Springs and the Australian Bicentennial Authority commissioned a stained glass window by Rubuntja for the gallery.[4]

In 1990, he collaborated with graphic design and poster artist Chips Mackinolty to produce a screen-printed poster entitled Atnengkerre Atherne Akwete - Two laws together for the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority of the Northern Territory (AAPA). In the centre of the poster is a watercolour painting by Mackinolty, based on a photograph he took of Rubuntja holding a boomerang. On either side of the portrait, one in watercolour and the other created with acrylic on canvas are works by Rubuntja: on the left, Uriatherrke (Mt Zell); and on the right, a dot painting of the caterpillar (altyerre) Dreaming at Nthwerrke (Emily Gap).[8]

Other roles and activities

[edit]

Rabuntja was also a storyteller and oral historian.[9]

He played football for Amoonguna in Alice Springs.[4]

He assisted archaeologist Mike Smith in his work.[4]

Personal life

[edit]

In the 1950s, Rubuntja married Cynthia, whose surname is variously reported as Kupitja (by their son, Mervyn),[4] and Uburtja.[1] She was a Luritja woman.[4] They had seven children, including Mervyn, Marlene, and Sally.[7] Mervyn also painted in the Hermannsburg tradition.[1]

He co-authored (with Jenny Green) his autobiography, The Town Grew Up Dancing, published in 2002.[1]

became a heavy drinker of alcohol during the 1960s, up until 1976, but he painted watercolours throughout this period. He stopped his heavy drinking when he became chair of the land council.[1]

Recognition and honours

[edit]

In 1995, Rubuntja was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia, for "service to Aboriginal people, particularly in Central Australia".[10]

A photograph of Rubuntja by Greg Weight, taken in 1998, hangs in the National Portrait Gallery of Australia.[6]

Death and legacy

[edit]

Rubuntja died in July 2005. Tangentyere Council, which he co-founded, paid tribute to him, saying that he played a key role in gaining tenure and rights for residents of the Alice Springs town camps, and "set an example of leadership that has been an inspiration to the next generation of Aboriginal leaders".[7]

Collections

[edit]

Rabuntja said that the Queen (Elizabeth II) and several prime ministers owned his paintings.[6] Pope John Paul II visited Alice Springs in 1986 and was presented with one of his paintings.[5]

His work is held in several major collections,[6] including:

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ An official record in 1957 recorded his name as Winton Numaja, and date of birth as 1915.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Wenten Rubuntja". The Hermannsburg School of Modern Art. 31 March 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
  2. ^ "Burt Creek". Place Names Register. NT Government. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
  3. ^ "Burt Creek". BushTel. NT Government. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Kimber, Dick (2011). Cultural values associated with Alice Springs water (PDF). ISBN 978-1-921937-28-6. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Hossack, Rebecca (12 August 2005). "Wenten Rubuntja". The Independent. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Weight, Greg. "WENTEN RUBUNTJA, 1998". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d "Tribute to Mr W. Rubuntja". Tangentyere Council. 10 October 2024. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  8. ^ Barrkman, Joanna (2023). Charles Darwin University Art Collection: 2023 Acquisitions (PDF). Charles Darwin University. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-922684-73-8. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  9. ^ a b "Wenten Rubuntja AM, b. 1923". National Portrait Gallery people. 2021. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
  10. ^ "Wenten Rubuntja". Australian Honours Search Facility, Dept of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Aboriginal rights campaigner dies". The Age. 4 July 2005. Retrieved 11 October 2024.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Rabuntja, Wenten and Green, Jenny, with contributions from Rowse, Tim. The town grew up dancing: the life and art of Wenten Rubuntja. 2002. Jukurrpa Books, Alice Springs.