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Maisie Ward Nungurrayi
Spinifex Hill StudioMaisie Ward Nungurrayi was born in Papunya around 1975, and is the daughter of Dr George Ward Tjapaltjarri, a well known artist and Ngangkari or medicine man. When she was still young Maisie moved to Kintore with her family and spent her school years there. She was one of four children, and her mother passed away when she was 16.
Maisie Ward Nungurrayi’s father Dr George lives in Docker River at the Aged Care. Maisie says that “he’s crippled and mostly blind, but he still talks to you and he knows who is coming, even though he can’t see them.” As a Ngangkari, a witchdoctor, “he goes everywhere at night time, travels.” He says “I was there – in your sleep. He started painting after my mother died, painting in Alice Springs. “My father told me to do the painting – his country.” He taught me Ngangkari, gave me some of that knowledge, sit down at night time. I’ve been fixing a lot of people.
Maisie made her first painting in Warakurna when she was visiting her auntie Pulpurra Davies, “my father’s younger sister.” Later after Maisie returned to Kintore, she began to paint on trips to Alice Springs. “No painting in Kintore, they don’t let young people do that painting – only old people.”
Maisie paints “stories from her mother’s country – Kulkuta near Tjukurla, and Tingari one from father’s country – Junti – I can paint it. Songs, I know. I got the Song, big culture there. Big culture for everybody, at Kiwirrkura – not in the place Kiwirrkura, but out in the bush. A lot of women were there for big culture meeting, a couple of years ago (maybe 2012).” I used to work for Women’s Congress. Languages – Luritja from my mother’s side and Ngaanyatjarra from my father’s side.
“We travelled a lot from Kintore to Docker River. I’ve been visiting family, my father’s family, all over – Warburton, Punmu, Well 33.” Maisie is married to Patrick Donovan Jangala Brown, and she has one son, and one grandson. Maisie is connected to some of the major figures of the early Papunya arts movement. Her older brothers, George Ward Tjungurrayi, Yala Yala Gibbs and Willy Tjungurrayi, were among the first artists to paint for the Papunya Tula arts cooperative in the early 1970s.