logo
NATSIAA 2025: Gaypalani Waṉambi wins $100,000 at National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards

NATSIAA 2025: Gaypalani Waṉambi wins $100,000 at National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards

Gaypalani Waṉambi, a Yolŋu artist from Northeast Arnhem Land, has taken out the $100,000 top prize at the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAAs), the longest-running and most prestigious award for Indigenous artists.
Waṉambi won the Telstra Art Award with her almost 3-metre x 3-metre etched metal work, titled Burwu, blossom, created on discarded road signs.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the name and image of an Indigenous person who has died.
Waṉambi's sister Dhukumul told ABC Radio National's Awaye! that the win was exciting, but bittersweet.
"It's emotional, because our father is not here to see her go up on the stage and see her win," says Dhukumul, who is also an artist.
Telstra Art AwardGaypalani Waṉambi
General Painting AwardIluwanti Ken
Work on Paper AwardNaomi Hobson
Bark Painting AwardBulanjdjan Lucy Yarawanga
Wandjuk Marika Memorial 3D AwardOwen Yalandja
Emerging Artist AwardSonia Gurrpulan Guyula
Multimedia AwardJahkarli Felicitas Romanis
Featured as a finalist in the Wandjuk Marika Memorial 3D Award at the NATSIAAs, Waṉambi follows in the footsteps of her artist father, the late Mr Waṉambi, who twice won that category, in 2010 and 2018.
Waṉambi started out as an artist in 2003, at the age of about 17, working with her father, who had made their home into a studio. She would assist him with tasks such as grinding ochre pigments, which he would then apply to a large pole or bark.
"Our father taught me how to paint our saltwater estates at Gurka'wuy when I was young," she says.
"After this I began to paint honey stories from our Marrakulu clan freshwater estates. He saw this and was encouraging me: [He said] 'I give you authority to paint these designs. You can carry this on when I am gone. You will hold these patterns and stand on them.'"
Waṉambi herself is a two-time NATSIAA finalist, first appearing in the exhibition in 2023; and she recently featuring in the exhibition Miwatj Yolŋu — Sunrise People at Bundanon Art Museum in regional NSW.
Last year, she won Australia's richest art prize for female artists, the Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize, worth $35,000. Her work is also currently on display — alongside her father's — at the Art Gallery of NSW in Sydney, as part of the exhibition Yolŋu power: the art of Yirrkala.
She plans to spend the NATSIAA prize money on cars for herself and her family, so they can travel more easily to Country.
"We want to go out to our Country and stay there," Dhukumul says.
"[With] this money, we can go out bush together."
Waṉambi is one of seven winners, from 71 finalists and 216 entries, at this year's NATSIAAs, including $15,000 awards for general painting, work on paper, bark painting and more.
Country is fundamental to Waṉambi's art practice.
In her award-winning artwork, Burwu, blossom, she tells a story of the honey hunter Wuyal, an Ancestor of the Marrakulu clan.
Looking for somewhere for the Marrakulu people to live, Wuyal travelled from Nilipitji to Gurka'wuy, where he cut down a Waṉambi tree, causing a river of honey to flow and establishing the people's homeland.
But Country is more than the source of the stories and symbols in Waṉambi's work; it's also where she finds her materials.
As a Yolŋu artist, she is bound by cultural practice to use mediums sourced from the land in her art. As one of the foremost women in the "Found" movement — which her father was also part of — she etches her designs into discarded materials, like the road signs used in Burwu, blossom.
After she collected the signs in Eastern Arnhem Land, Waṉambi painted one side in black aerosol paint, before drilling patterns representing bees, her totem, and etching stringybark flowers into the metal. The intricacy of her designs mirrors her father's richly detailed work.
"If you go visit [my Country], you could see the stringybark tree's blossoms, and maybe it'll tell you that the honey is ready," Dhukumul says.
The NATSIAA judges — academic and curator Stephen Gilchrist, artist Gail Mabo, and academic and artist Brian Martin — praised Burwu, blossom as "shimmer[ing] with exquisitely rendered designs that are deeply anchored to Yolŋu philosophies".
Waṉambi's father taught her how to be an artist, but she's not the only NATSIAA winner with family connections. Bulanjdjan Lucy Yarawanga, who won the award for Bark Painting, is culturally a grandmother to Owen Yalandja, who won the Wandjuk Marika Memorial 3D Award.
Yalandja, a Kuninjku artist, spent a year crafting his award-winning wooden sculpture, Ngalkodjek Yawkyawk, of a mimih or yawkyawk, a mermaid-like figure. Like Waṉambi, he learned carving from his father.
He was praised by the judges as "an artist at the height of their powers … By utilising new materials and techniques to retell an ancient story, Yalandja's work plays a vital role in maintaining, safeguarding and invigorating cultural practices".
In her award-winning black-and-white bark painting, Bawáliba & Ngalyod, Yarawanga, a Gurr-goni artist, depicted Ngalyod, a Rainbow Serpent, surrounded by various-sized spirit figures, the Bawáliba, who protect the Gurr-goni people.
The judges praised Yarawanga as an "intuitive, confident and uninhibited artist".
Yarawanga was excited to win, but remains humble about her practice, which includes works on bark, textiles and paper.
"I'm not a proud woman or something like that, but I know how to paint," she says. "Sometimes I tell stories; sometimes not."
The story in Bawáliba & Ngalyod is one told to her by her mother, who died in 2019.
The artist recalls her mother first started telling her about the spirits and the Rainbow Serpent when she was eight or nine years old and making a lot of noise with her brother.
The Bawáliba are mischievous, she says. For instance, they would, while the family were sleeping, seem to make the sound of a car or turn on a light: "But it's not a car; it's not a light."
Yarawanga hopes Yalandja is not her only family member who follows her into making art.
When she makes art, she says, "I bring my granddaughter to teach her how [to paint], so if I pass [away], then she might take it up."
Jahkarli Felicitas Romanis, a Pitta Pitta artist who won the Multimedia Award at the NATSIAAs, was inspired to be an artist by her father, Wurundjeri and Boonwerrung sculptor Glenn Romanis.
"[He] inspired me to take this path, and showed me that it was possible," Romanis says. "And my mum and I always go to Country together … I definitely wouldn't be here if it wasn't for my family.
"Dad's practice is so incredible. When you're a kid, you don't really appreciate it; it was just kind of Dad's job.
"But as I got older, I really have been able to recognise the amount of work that he's put into his practice and the way that he's been able to raise a family as an artist."
Winning the Multimedia Award — for her framed light-box prints — was "overwhelming [and] surreal".
The judges described her work as using "unsettling stillness [to] .. highlight Google's glitches and pixelations to reveal its technological limits and its stark contrast with Indigenous conceptualisations of Country".
Romanis started using Google Earth in her practice in 2020.
"I couldn't travel to Country to make images, so I became interested in the fusion of Western systems of cartography and photography technologies and what happens when those two things come together," she says.
She's particularly fascinated by the way photography and technology shape how we understand the world around us.
"I like to think of Google Earth as an archive of Country," she says.
"It makes sense that First Peoples are engaging with these technologies. We're adaptive and we're innovative. … [And] my practice is really a vehicle for connecting to Country and to Ancestors, and it's a real privilege to do that."
NATSIAA curator, Taungurung artist Kate ten Buuren, describes "all of the different ways that people connect and express their relationship to the places that they belong" as one of the themes of this year's exhibition.
Romanis is especially proud to be a part of a NATSIAA exhibition that boasts a majority of female finalists and winners.
"It really speaks back to the matriarchs of our communities," she says.
"I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for my mum.
"I think ultimately Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have such important practices and such important stories to share, and what an honour it is to be in such good company."
The NATSIAA exhibition runs until January 26 at Museum and Art Gallery Northern Territory, Darwin.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kaylee McKeown hard launches new relationship with ex-AFL player Declan Watson, swimming latest news
Kaylee McKeown hard launches new relationship with ex-AFL player Declan Watson, swimming latest news

Daily Telegraph

time23 minutes ago

  • Daily Telegraph

Kaylee McKeown hard launches new relationship with ex-AFL player Declan Watson, swimming latest news

Don't miss out on the headlines from Swimming. Followed categories will be added to My News. Australia's Olympic golden girl Kaylee McKeown has publicly revealed her new partner – former North Melbourne AFL-listed-player-turned-lawyer Declan Watson – just a week after her stunning world championships performance in Singapore. McKeown is undoubtedly one of Australia's biggest Olympic stars, the first Aussie in history to win back-to-back 100m-200m swimming titles following her incredible performances in Paris last year. Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. But behind the golden glow McKeown suffered heartache, with a split from her long term boyfriend and fellow Dolphins swimmer Brendan Smith. McKeown and Smith had dated for about four years, both having set up base on the Gold Coast in the lead up to the Paris Olympics training under Michael Bohl. But since the split, and with Bohl relocating to China, McKeown has left the Gold Coast and relocated back home to the Sunshine Coast with her family to continue her swimming career. PREMIUM CONTENT The one topic that's off limits in the household of star Matilda Inside the lives of Australian sporting power couples Who is Australia's greatest swimmer this century? Swim star Kaylee McKeown has publicly revealed her new partner Declan Watson. Picture: Instagram McKeown with her new beau at Uluru. Picture: Instagram However the 24-year-old has clearly moved on with life, winning double backstroke gold again in Singapore and then returning home for a well-deserved holiday with her new man posting some stunning photos of their holiday to Uluru. Watson too posted photos of McKeown on his Instagram page – making the duo Insta-official. The 26-year-old was drafted by North Melbourne with pick No.34 in the 2016 draft but after back-to-back ACL injuries the key defender never played a game for the Kangaroos and was de-listed in 2019. He has since returned home to Brisbane where he now works as a lawyer. 'Declan showed some great potential but unfortunately was set back with injury,' North VFL coach David Loader said at the time. 'He was a great contributor to our group and we certainly wish him all the best for the future.'

US TV star Jeremy Piven slams Perth in wild remark during interview
US TV star Jeremy Piven slams Perth in wild remark during interview

News.com.au

time41 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

US TV star Jeremy Piven slams Perth in wild remark during interview

Jeremy Piven poked fun at an Australian city at the premiere of his new movie on Tuesday evening. The former Entourage star, 60, has been Down Under a lot recently between filming the movie Primitive War and doing his stand-up routine in numerous Aussie cities. It turns out one in particular left a lasting impression on Piven, who suggested Perth could do with a name change. 'In the middle of my tour, we headed over to Perth which is the meth capital of Australia, I don't know if you know that,' he teased during an interview with Daily Mail. He then took aim at President's Trump recent renaming of The Gulf of Mexico, adding: 'And so, in the spirit of Donald Trump, I wanna rename Perth: 'Merth'.' Piven went on to recall his favourite places to visit Down Under, revealing that Perth wasn't that bad after all. 'The reality is, I went to a cigar bar called The Social Club there and it was one of the best cigar lounges I've ever been to in my life,' he confessed. 'Every stop that I had, whether it was the Enmore Theatre here in Sydney or going to Melbourne and playing Hamer Hall, they were some of the best times I've ever had in my life,' added the star. Piven is best known for his role in Hollywood dramedy Entourage. The actor played the Ari Gold on the HBO series from 2004 to 2011, as well as appearing in the 2015 movie. It comes after The Entourage star arrived at Nova 100's Melbourne studios for the Jase & Lauren show on Friday morning straight off his red-eye flight from Perth, and understandably, he found it hard to find his bearings. 'I just got off a plane from Perth and I don't know where I am right now, but the one thing I do know is that I think after this I'm going to retire,' he said. 'After this interview, I'm gong to end this horrible charade.' 'I just got off a plane from Perth and what's amazing is I'm on this tour,' he began, before Phillips attempted to cut him off after which he told her to 'let me just finish real quick'. 'I'm so excited to be in Australia and I'm going to all these beautiful places and all of a sudden they throw Perth in the mix and that's when everything goes off the rails. The five-and-half-hours flight will throw you off.'

Grimes guest programs rage (2013)
Grimes guest programs rage (2013)

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Grimes guest programs rage (2013)

See you on a dark night… this Friday actually, because this week's Vault Guest Programmer is none other than self proclaimed techno-homo artist Grimes! Filmed back in December 2012 when Grimes (a.k.a. Claire Elise Boucher) took her Visions Tour down under, this classic rage episode gives us a glimpse into the mind an artist riding the wave of one of their most iconic releases. Join her on the red couch along with mates(?) Lafayette and Colleen as they take picks at some of their favourite music videos. There's some true 2012 internet easter eggs in the mix, with appearances from artists like Skrillex, PSY, Nicki Minaj and many more…. Don't miss out on the Visions on ABC Entertains from 11:13pm this Friday, August 15.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store