Minnie Pwerle

"SALE of our 30 year Collection - All offers will be considered by Werner!"

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AwelyeOriginal Aboriginal PaintingMinnie Pwerle (1910-2006)Boomerang Art
90 x 127 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2301 /
90 x 127 cm
$22,000.00 AUD
Awelye
81 x 147 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
1667 /
81 x 147 cm
$22,300.00 AUD
Awelye
90 x 128 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
4772-4 /
90 x 128 cm
$22,500.00 AUD
Aboriginal Art by Minnie Pwerle
84 x 148 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
1663 /
84 x 148 cm
$23,600.00 AUD
Awelye
109 x 119 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
4081 /
109 x 119 cm
$24,000.00 AUD
AwelyeOriginal Aboriginal ArtMinnie Pwerle (1910-2006)Boomerang Art
88 x 149 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
1896 /
88 x 149 cm
$25,000.00 AUD
Awelye
90 x 148 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
1670 /
90 x 148 cm
$25,000.00 AUD
Awelye
90 x 147 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2381 /
90 x 147 cm
$26,000.00 AUD
Awelye
90 x 150 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2380 /
90 x 150 cm
$26,000.00 AUD
Awelye - Women's CeremonyOriginal Aboriginal PaintingMinnie Pwerle (1910-2006)Boomerang Art
86 x 149 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2383 /
86 x 149 cm
$26,000.00 AUD
Awelye
90 x 150 cm

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2384 /
90 x 150 cm
$26,000.00 AUD
AwelyeOriginal Aboriginal ArtMinnie Pwerle (1910-2006)Boomerang Art

Awelye

Year painted: 2005
2007 / 120 x 120 cm
$27,300.00 AUD

Minnie Pwerle was born in c.1910/1920 and passed away in 2006. She commenced painting in her late eighties and almost instantly became a success story. Just five years into her career as an Aboriginal artist she was listed as one of Australia’s Top 50 “Most Collectable Artists” in the Australian Art Collector. During her brief career her paintings were steadily growing in popularity and demand for her art is as strong as ever.

Minnie had a wonderful and, at times, wild sense of colour. Her brush marks were free and sometimes dry as the acrylic paint was dragged with undiminished energy across the canvas. Minnie’s work centred on Aweyle-Atnwengerrp, that is, women’s ceremonial concerns from her home country.

Other dreaming’s Minnie painted included the bush tomato and the wild desert orange. The fruits of both plants are represented in Minnie’s canvasses by a circular shape.

Also common in her work is a pendulous shape painted with parallel lines. This shape represents the breast of a women which has been painted for the performance of women’s business. In her life as a tribal elder, Minnie had been appointed a ceremonial body painter. Minnie sought to preserve aspects of this important role when she came to do paintings on canvas.

Minnie was one of six children and had seven of her own. Until several years before her death, she had visited Alice Springs only once. In the final years, however, Minnie travelled widely within Australia. She never went overseas.


Minnie Pwerle's first exhibition was in 2000 at Flinders Lane Gallery in Melbourne and many others followed and her works can be found in numerous collections in Australia and overseas and no collection of Aboriginal Art is complete without a Minnie painting.