- Many
Kunwinjku artists also
employ rarrk,
including John
Mawurndjul and
Peter Marralwanga. A sub-style of
rarrk,
known as x-ray art,
shows part of the...
-
Yolngu people and an
Aboriginal Australian bark
painter known for his use of
rarrk.
Gawirrin Gumana, also
known as Gawurin, Gouarin, Gawarrin, Gawirrin, Garwirin...
- use of
rarrk.
Senior artists often require the help from more
novice painters when
creating this
tedious rarrk design. In
order to
paint the
rarrk design...
-
Northern Australia,
especially in
Arnhem Land,
include cross-hatching, or
rarrk, and x-ray style. Baskets,
sometimes coiled baskets, were
created by twisting...
-
articulated limbs and beak-like
mouths and cross-hatching
known as
rarrk. The use of
rarrk is
connected to the
Madayin ceremony,
meaning that when it is featured...
- the
traditional cross-hatching
style of bark
painting technique known as
rarrk.
Mawurndjul was born on 31
December 1951 in Mumeka, a
traditional camping...
- of
Aboriginal Australian painting; see Bark
painting § Cross-hatching (
rarrk) "X-Ray", a song by Left
Spine Down from
Caution X-Ray, a
member of the...
-
ceremonial and
spiritual creatures alongside the cross-hatching
pattern known as
rarrk. He
taught younger artists of his
region including his son, Ivan Namirrki...
-
while incorporating rarrk.
Rarrk is a
style that is
derived from
traditional ritual practices and
features geometric cross-hatching.
Rarrk is
symbolic of ancestral...
- by
covering his
statues in his now
trademark dots
instead of
traditional rarrk designs. This
ceremony was
performed in
public spaces in
Maningrida where...