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'Through the Arrernte Women’s Song project we’ve been documenting culture. These paintings are drawn from a song shared with us by a very senior knowledge-holder MK Turner. The lyrics are “I am a woman, I am in my dreaming, I am shimmering”. They really resonated with me as a powerful, joyful assertion of the incredible matriarchy in our culture. As well as melding beautifully with the contemporary experience of being a First Nations person on the journey of our dynamic, adaptive, resilient culture. Despite everything done to take it away.' – Thea
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‘I’ve come to realise that we’re all storytellers, and if we’re not speaking our own truths, we’re supporting the voices of others.’ – Thea Perkins
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Shimmer – where are you going to?
By Hannah Donnelly‘I am a woman and I am shimmering.' These words opened a new world of light and divinity for Thea Perkins. Perkins is an Arrernte and Kalkadoon artist working within a painting practice that explores the lived experiences of Aboriginal people today. Her early work has emphasised portraiture that is both a celebration and an archive of our dynamic and adaptive cultural resilience in the 21st century.
The title Shimmer is inspired by a public Arrernte women’s ceremony shared by a very senior knowledge-holder, MK Turner OAM. The lyrics are 'altyerre ayenge alhelharrke-parrkaye' which translates to 'I am a woman and I am shimmering.' Perkins was working on the Arrernte Women’s Song Project project in 2020 to revitalise Aurukun Women’s song and story when she came across this assertion of matriarchal power.
‘Because there weren’t many female anthropologists back in the day, when our stories were first being collected, early colonial and academic records mostly hold men’s dreaming, even today people assume that women don’t have dreaming in those places,’ says Perkins. Her works respond to the contemporary records of women’s dreaming by searching for the shimmering all around her.
‘Once I began looking for ever-present light I started seeing it everywhere. Visiting water holes near Alice Springs I noticed the way water flows and is mirrored onto the rock face, or the illusion of paint and how light travels through it. I thought about my people, skin names, and how light reflects off my skin’. In Perkins exploration of shimmering she is also critiquing a mainstream or popularised understanding of dreaming or dreamtime as reductive stories of past. She wants to show the expansive realities that connects to dreaming and the transitional space of experiencing a pull to country. The transitional is where practices can bend to new forms – the sense of being pulled towards a place is something Perkins hopes people will connect to in these works.
Expanding the narrative of what life is like for a First Nations person today is central to Perkins work. She is interested in dissolving stereotypes by articulate her memories of a close and loving family, a sense of being grounded and feeling safe, contrary to sensationalised political and media commentary around Aboriginal families that fuels policies of out-of-home care and child removal. Working from photographic collections of her family, many of the portrait images in Shimmer have been photographed by Perkins and the matriarchs of the family.
Repurposing traditional European painting formats is one of many strategies Perkins utilises to communicate her story. In the work Shimmer 1 gold leaf sits on the surface. Perkins has learnt to gild with gold leafing in what she describes as a strange process given that it was used to symbolise the wealth and control of the Church. Historically, gilding illuminated sacred manuscripts or was used as a pigment to embody celestial spirits. In this way, Perkins is adapting the Western vernacular of icon painting to give us a new collective and public sacred image for our spiritual energy and devotion in contemporary life.
Perkins has also worked with new forms and landscape. Through delving into the concept of shimmering, new worlds have been created in abstracted saltwater and coast lines. The play of light camouflages the typographical features but still speaks to Country. Shimmer exists in multiple places like many Aboriginal people today who live in Sydney and experience a sense of internal diaspora from our ancestral homelands.
In Shimmer, Perkins has articulated the pull to belong, the love of many women and Aboriginal divinity.
Hannah Donnelly is a Wiradjuri writer, curator and producer working and living on Wangal and Burramattagal.
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Current / Upcoming Museum Exhibitions.
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Archibald Prize 2021
Art Gallery of New South Wales 5 Jun - 26 Sep 2021Thea Anamara Perkins is a finalist in the The Archibald Prize with her work Rachel – a portrait of her aunt Rachel Perkins. The exhibition will tour to the following... -
TELSTRA NATSIA AWARDS 2021
Museum and Art Gallery Northern Territory 7 Aug 2021 - 6 Feb 2022Thea is a finalist with her work A Bastard Like Me. Kyra won the Emerging Artist Category with her work Moongalba II. The Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander...
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Featured Press.
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Thea Anamara Perkins
4 Jun 2021Thea Anamara Perkins features in The Australian’s WISH inaugural art issue. ‘Nurtured by a proud lineage, artist Thea Anamara Perkins draws on memory, photographs and story to produce portraits that... -
The Amazing Art-Making Of Thea Anamara Perkins
4 Jun 2021Artist Thea Anamara Perkins is an Arrernte and Kalkadoon woman, with family ties to the Redfern community in Sydney. At just 29 years old, she’s been nominated for the Archibald...
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