<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Australian Aboriginal art / Yolngu / Folk art / Indigenous Australian art / Yirrkala /  Northern Territory / Bark painting / Indigenous Australians / Darwin /  Northern Territory / David Malangi / Northern Territory / Indigenous peoples of Australia / Arnhem Land
Date: 2014-02-28 01:31:27
Australian Aboriginal art
Yolngu
Folk art
Indigenous Australian art
Yirrkala
Northern Territory
Bark painting
Indigenous Australians
Darwin
Northern Territory
David Malangi
Northern Territory
Indigenous peoples of Australia
Arnhem Land

Arts BackBone Volume 13: Issue 2, December/January Introduction

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.territorystories.nt.gov.au

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 2,00 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

RBA_Horizontal_Outlined_Black

RBA_Horizontal_Outlined_Black

DocID: 1rs6F - View Document

Georgina Rayner, Narayan Khandekar and Katherine Eremin Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Harvard Art Museum Rita Giannini and Andrew Shortland Centre for Archaeological and Forensic Analysis, Cranfie

Georgina Rayner, Narayan Khandekar and Katherine Eremin Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Harvard Art Museum Rita Giannini and Andrew Shortland Centre for Archaeological and Forensic Analysis, Cranfie

DocID: 1r3Uf - View Document

Arts  Volume 8: Issue 1 June 2008 Backbone

Arts Volume 8: Issue 1 June 2008 Backbone

DocID: 18D9w - View Document

Arts  BackBone Volume 13: Issue 2, December/January  Introduction

Arts BackBone Volume 13: Issue 2, December/January Introduction

DocID: 18y9S - View Document

marrnyula munuNggurr, ganybu EXHIBITION OPENING: FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 2015, 6–8PM EXHIBITION DATES: 30 JANUARY – 14 MARCH 2015 Marrnyula Mununggurr presents a new body of work, Ganybu — a vast matrix of 252 small bark

marrnyula munuNggurr, ganybu EXHIBITION OPENING: FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 2015, 6–8PM EXHIBITION DATES: 30 JANUARY – 14 MARCH 2015 Marrnyula Mununggurr presents a new body of work, Ganybu — a vast matrix of 252 small bark

DocID: 17NTm - View Document