The stranger artist : a life at the edge of Kimberley painting / Quentin Sprague.
Publication details: Richmond, Victoria : Hardie Grant Books, 2020.Description: 277 pages : illustrations, portraits, map ; 24 cmISBN:- 9781743795989
- Oliver, Tony, 1940-
- Oliver, Tony, (Art consultant)
- Oliver, Tony
- Art - Economic aspects
- Gigi people (N125) (NT SD53-07)
- Aboriginal Australian painters -- Western Australia -- Kimberley (W.A.)
- Painters, Aboriginal Australian -- Australia -- Kimberley (W.A.)
- Art consultants -- Australia -- Kimberley (W.A.) -- Biography
- Painting, Aboriginal Australian -- Australia -- Kimberley (W.A.)
- Art, Aboriginal Australian -- Australia -- Kimberley (W.A.)
- Painters, Aboriginal Australian -- Western Australia -- Kimberley
- Art consultants -- Western Australia -- Kimberley -- Biography
- Painting, Aboriginal Australian -- Western Australia -- Kimberley
- Art, Aboriginal Australian -- Western Australia -- Kimberley
- East Kimberley area (WA SD52, SE52)
- Kununurra (WA East Kimberley SD52-14)
- Bedford Downs (WA East Kimberley SE52-05)
- Australian
- 759.994 23
- Winner 2021 Prime Minister's Literary Award for Non-Fiction.
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Biography | 759.994 SPR | Available | 063701 |
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this book contains images and written depictions of people who have passed away.
Amid the striking landscapes of the East Kimberley, art adviser Tony Oliver find himself deeply immersed in the world of a group of senior Gija artists. The bonds he forms with renowned painters Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms backdrop the establishment of the groundbreaking Jirrawun Arts, quickly to become one of the most successful and controversial centres of Australia's acclaimed Aboriginal art movement. As Oliver comes to share not only the artists' many successes but their tragedies too, his own life's trajectory will forever be altered. This book is an account of a decade in art, and life between cultures: a sensitive yet unflinching portrait of both darkness and light.
Winner 2021 Prime Minister's Literary Award for Non-Fiction.