Our Land Art Gallery and its online presence AboriginalArtShop.com have adopted a new global identity, Artlandish Aboriginal Art of Australia. The new brand unites under one banner both our online gallery and our traditional outlets located in Kununurra, Western Australia. Artlandish Aboriginal Art will continue our mission to showcase the finest Australian Aboriginal Art to all corners of the world whilst furthering our commitment to provide our clients with the highest quality authentic artworks, exceptional customer service and true value for money.
Boab Nut Carvings & Aboriginal Artefacts

Carving is synonymous with Aboriginal Culture, from the rock art of the Wandjina to the simple drawings in the sand of the desert people. Many tribes carved rocks, leaving handprints saying "We have been here". Some of these include drawings of children's hands, telling the world that the whole family or tribe were in that place for some time.

The Boab Tree


Buy Boab Nut Carvings in the Artlandish Online Gallery

The Artists have now taken carving a step further - Aboriginal people are producing magnificent pieces - wood carvings of figurines, imaginatively carved tree stumps which magically appear as a bird with wings, furled in the hands of the artist, totem carvings of Arnhem Land and the Tiwi Islands, slate carvings from the abundance of natural soft rock in the Northern part of Australia, wood carvings of birds and animals painted with artistic skill to be lifelike. To the untrained eye, a branch of a tree is just that - to an artist, it becomes a snake, or goanna, or turtle. These artefacts stem from the Aboriginal's power of observance, imagination and raw, clever artistic talent.

BOAB NUTS OF THE KIMBERLEY

The Boab Tree is a mystery in itself - purportedly native to Madagascar, it grows in Australia only in the Kimberley Region of West Australia and the Victoria River area of the Northern Territory. Its trunk is voluminous, often trees are seen growing in "triplicate" (three trunks intertwined), its branches spiderlike in comparison with the bulky trunk - impressively monolithic to say the least.
 

Aboriginal people used it for shelter, and its large "nuts" for food and medicinal purposes. The early white settlers often chose particular trees as meeting places on stock routes when droving - and then there is the Prison Boab near Derby, able to hold overnight up to ten prisoners en route to the next town.

Now, the Boab Tree has become part of the Art of the Aboriginal people - the large nuts provide a wonderful avenue for painting and carving. The picking of the nuts to be used for artefacts is vital to the finished product - the nuts must dry on the trees, but be picked prior to the winds, which suddenly arrive, to sever the nuts from the branches and send them crashing to the hard earth below. The larger and better formed the nut, the more sought after - but then, even the small ones are presented as tiny birds, echidnas, and all manner of interesting flora, fauna and ornamental objects.

Many Aboriginal people specialise in Boab Nut carving - Dusty Legune, a retired drover and "nature's gentleman" carves bush turkeys, rainbow serpents, native trees, invariably choosing long nuts to add scope to his style. Roslyn Karadada again shows her many and varied skills in carving, of course, Wandjina. Both these artists always carve their signature on their work.
 

The boab nuts from Wyndham are of a darker natural colour, and the artists there take the opportunity of finely etching faces, usually of elder Aboriginal people, together with their Totems such as snakes, kangaroos and other native animals. The nuts on the working cattle stations at Doon Doon and Glen Hill are huge and hard - it takes a strong carver like Gordon Hall to make an imprint on these - his pieces are almost three dimensional (so are his paintings) and he carves so the central figures actually "stand up" from the nut. Different techniques, but also very clever.

We have pieces by many artists from all over the Kimberley region - their works make ideal centre pieces for table settings, mantelpiece ornaments, outdoor decorations.


The inimitable Peggy Patrick with her “Wall of Boabs”
(Artlandish Gallery Collection)
 

 

 

 

Did you know?

Boomerangs were not only used for hunting but to make music during Corroborees. Many Didgeridoo players would tap the boomer on the didgi whilst playing.

 

We Are A Member of

The Australian Indigenous Art Trade Association




Australia-The Movie!!!

Now Released Worldwide on DVD

Australia, the much-anticipated romantic action-adventure movie starring Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman, filmed amongst some of Australia's most breathtaking scenery including Kununurra continues to break records with the worldwide release of the film on DVD!

Click on the link for information on Australia The Movie as well as a behind the scene look at how Kununurra and a number of local Aboriginals played an important part in this epic movie!

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This website contains images of deceased artists as well as their paintings

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Artlandish Aboriginal Art Gallery: 10 Papuana St Kununurra 6743, Western Australia, Australia Tel: +61 8 91681 881, Mobile: 041 77 222 11, Fax: +61 8 91681 881 Email: info@aboriginalartshop.com Web: www.aboriginalartshop.com © Copyright Artlandish Aboriginal Art of Australia All Rights Reserved