MILMILNGKAN SITE, 2008

Important Australian Indigenous Art
Melbourne
26 March 2025
22

BALANG NAKURULK (MR MAWURNDJUL)

(1952 - 2024)
MILMILNGKAN SITE, 2008

natural earth pigments with synthetic binder on eucalyptus tetradonta bark

130.0 x 53.0 cm (irregular)

bears inscription on label attached verso: artist's name, subject, medium, size, language group and Maningrida Arts and Culture cat. 1239-08

Estimate: 
$18,000 – $25,000
Sold for $22,091 (inc. BP) in Auction 81 - 26 March 2025, Melbourne
Provenance

Maningrida Arts and Culture, Maningrida, Northern Territory (label attached verso)
Private collection, New South Wales
Cooee Art, Sydney, 27 November 2018, lot 44 (as ‘Mardayin at Dilebang’)
Private collection, Sydney

This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Maningrida Arts and Culture which states:

‘John Mawurndjul has depicted Mardayin at Milmilngkan. The billabong at Milmilngkan is where Ngalyod – the rainbow serpent – resides under the water.

Kuninjku people say there are two Rainbow serpents. One is Yingarna who is said to have been the original creator of all ancestral beings, the ‘first mother’. Yingarna’s first born is the Rainbow serpent called Ngalyod. Yingarna – the rainbow serpent – or her son Ngalyod are common subject on contemporary Kuninjku bark paintings.

Ngalyod is very important in Kuninjku cosmology and is associated with the creation of all sacred sites, djang, in Kuninjku clan lands. For example, ancestral stories relate how creators or ancestral beings had travelled across the country and had angered Ngalyod who swallowed them and returned to the earth to create the site. Today, Ngalyod protects these sites and its power is present in each one. Ngalyod has both powers of creation and destruction and is most strongly associated with rain, monsoon seasons and rainbows which are a manifestation of Ngalyod’s power and presence. Ngalyod is associated with the destructive power of the storms and with plenty of the wet season, being both a destroyer and a giver of life. Ngalyod’s power controls the fertility of the country and the seasons.

John Mawurndjul lives at Milmilngkan near this billabong and says that underneath the water lies the power of Ngalyod. In this painting, he depicts the power of the place with rarrk – cross-hatching – which contains Mardayin power.’