MAḎAYIN • Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala
Lots of great ideas are hatched around an open fire.
Ask Henry Skerritt. At The Fralin Museum of Art, he might tell you about one that was hatched at the former Three Notch'd Brewery, now the site of Charlottesville's City Market, that helped open a cross-cultural portal in the art world and changed lives in the process – starting with his.
Skerritt, then a PhD candidate at the University of Pittsburgh, came to Charlottesville to spend time with Aboriginal Australian artist Dr. Djambawa Marawili, who was undertaking an artist residency at Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection sponsored by Australia Council for the Arts.
"When Djambawa saw the bark paintings at Kluge-Ruhe, he was quite taken aback," Skerritt said. "The way he put it was that a fire came into his belly seeing them." He recalled Djambawa's baritone voice sagely delivering marching orders that night that would send them on a remarkable eight-year shared journey, bringing together artistic leaders from Aboriginal homelands across the globe with curators at some of America's leading museums and opening the eyes and minds of arts lovers to a growing and powerful movement and moment.
"What you need to do," Djambawa told Skerritt and Australian curator Kade McDonald, "is go and organize this touring exhibition that tells the whole story of Yolŋu bark painting."
That meeting marked the beginning of Maḏayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala, the most significant exhibition of bark painting ever to tour the United States. Maḏayin is the result of years of collaboration between Kluge-Ruhe and Indigenous knowledge holders from Buku-Larrŋgay Mulka Centre in northern Australia.
Now at The Fralin, after widely acclaimed stops at Dartmouth's Hood Museum of Art and American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center, Maḏayin encompasses more than eight decades of work representing one of Australia's most significant contributions to the global art world. The bark paintings, drawn from Kluge-Ruhe's celebrated collection and museums and private collections in the U.S. and Australia, are an outgrowth of a long-held tradition of the Yolŋu people in northern Australia of painting sacred clan designs on their bodies and ceremonial objects. With the arrival of the Europeans in the 20th century, Yolŋu turned to readily available eucalyptus bark and launched a creative explosion that transformed ancient designs into compelling and contemporary art.
The title, suggested by one of the artists represented in the exhibition, was originally a placeholder. Maḏayin, meaning sacred and beautiful, is a very important term. Some worried it would be inappropriate as an exhibition title. As the process went on, the exhibition grew into the term. It would include magnificent paintings telling historical and genealogical stories for the Yolŋu. Did it meet the serious bar the term sets?
The more the debate went on, the more it became clear that the authority and gravitas the project was gaining every step of the way seemed to fit the word, which in turn put a level of expectation that served as a sort of guiding star to all involved.
Skerritt knew that if this story were to be told, it would need to be told by Djambawa and other representatives of the artistic and cultural communities from where it came. They engaged with Wukuṉ Waṉambi, who, along with Djambawa, would become the project's heart and soul, weaving common threads among intermarrying clans of artists. It was their story to tell.
By the time of his second or third visit to Yirrkala, watching as Djambawa and Wukun engaged in an animated planning session, Skerritt realized Kluge-Ruhe's role in all this had become simple: Just say yes. Yes to everything, including a request for a bilingual exhibition catalog featuring a language spoken by around 6,000 people. "We basically created a cottage industry of translators to distribute a book in a language no one in the United States reads. But it was the right thing to do."
Reality soon intervened. COVID slowed the project's wheels as it slowed the world. Yet, at the same time, the Black Lives Matter movement, the global protests around George Floyd's death, and the greater visibility of Indigenous groups made the exhibition's theme of connectivity more important than ever.
"This is a story that dates to the 1930s about a group of people who, every time they have had their backs against the wall and faced the prospect of annihilation and dispossession, have responded by putting an immense amount of beauty into the world," Skerritt said. "They have the power of their ancestral connections and ancestral narratives, and they share them as a kind of gesture of goodwill to bring people together and to accentuate what brings us together as opposed to what divides us. It's a particularly powerful message in today's world."
Committing to tell this whole story was one thing. Deciding how to do it was a different story. The story was social. It was political. It was cultural. And most importantly for these artists, it was intensely personal.
That is why it was so critical to Wukuṉ that he represents the effort, from the earliest days of meeting with artists in Yirrkala to working with museum curators, to make sure it would be told correctly and in the right spirit. He worked with Kluge-Ruhe's education staff to develop the school education materials, edited the catalogue, wrote the labels, and picked the wall colors.
He did it all, Skerritt said, while carrying a heavy physical burden of pain amid failing health, spending weeks in the hospital during one visit to Charlottesville. Wukuṉ would not live to see the results of his passionate labor, passing away not long before the exhibit's debut at Dartmouth. His last message to Skerritt was an approval for the catalog's cover, which would feature his artwork.
Before it opened to the public, there was one more debate around cultural norms to be had. In preparing for the Dartmouth opening, the Hood's curator, Jami Powell, had decided to include in the artists' gift bag a t-shirt they had made that featured the cover artwork. Skerritt had sent one to his ailing friend, who wore it every day in his last months. The issue was that in Aboriginal cultures, sharing such work by a recently deceased artist is not accepted. A brief panic was stopped for good by Djambawa, who inspected the shirt and said, "This is great. We are honoring this man, and we will wear them to the opening celebration!"
The decision, Skerritt said, was evidence of how the strictness of cultural laws and traditions can be superseded by the compassion inherent in this art and in this man whose commitment to crossing cultures is now being appreciated so many miles away.
Maḏayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala will be on display at The Fralin Museum of Art through July 14.