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Exhibition
The lives of Rover Thomas and Queenie McKenzie crossed over at various times particularly at Texas
Downs Station where Rover worked as a stockman for nine years and Queenie worked as a station cook
for forty years. One day at a mustering camp, Rover got thrown from his horse, which stepped on
his head tearing off his scalp back to his ears. There was no doctor or nurse for hundreds of
kilometres so Queenie took Rover back to the camp, sterilised a needle and sewed his scalp back on
so well that later the doctors did not even need to restitch it.
Much later, during the mid 1970s, Rover Thomas and Queenie McKenzie moved to live at Warmun
community where they both became outstanding artists, initially producing work for Mary Macha, the
Manager of Aboriginal Traditional Arts, Perth and later for Waringarri Aboriginal Arts, Kununurra.
Rover Thomas and Queenie McKenzie died in 1998 and are greatly missed as senior artists and
cultural leaders in their community but they have left a remarkable legacy, having inspired many
younger Gija men and women to follow in their footsteps.
As this exhibition shows, both artists work with earth pigments mixed with natural fixatives,
giving the works a matte textured surface at one with the land of which they are part. In common
with other Gija artists from Warmun, Queenie McKenzie depicts the hill and river country of the
East Kimberley in lateral perspective so that each painting has a clear reading direction. The
compositional field of her early works is often crowded, dense with rocky hills, boab trees, or
people hunting and gathering. It echoes the rich topography of the East Kimberley, full of rocky
protrusions, twisted hills and ample bottle trees.
By contrast, Rover Thomas flattens out country, stripping it to its bones and rendering it mainly
in planar perspective. His work captures the flat, sparse expanses of desert terrain
characteristic of Kukatja/Wangkajunga territory where he came from. He condenses complex
mythological and topographical information into simple abstract elements, fusing the cosmic and
the concrete on the surface of the canvas. Although coming from different perspectives, both Rover
Thomas and Queenie McKenzie express their inner feeling for country which is painted from the
inside, with the mind's eye, and revealed in organic symbols as if through its bones.
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