Lake Argyle Country
Freddie Timms, Gija / Australian, 1946 - 2017
Gija
Warmun
East Kimberley
Western Australia
Australia
1998
Ochres on canvas (diptych)
Overall: 33 7/16 × 23 5/8 in. (85 × 60 cm)
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Gift of Will Owen and Harvey Wagner
2009.92.96ab
Geography
Place Made: Australia, Oceania
Period
20th century
Object Name
Painting
Research Area
Painting
Not on view
Label
This painting shows Lake Argyle, created by white men in the 1960s who dammed the Ord River to develop farmable land. Notice the lake, large, empty, and white, while its surroundings show the living Country of black and red soil, waterholes, hills, and creeks. Like Goody Barret, whose work is nearby, Timms grew up in this area, working on Lissadell Station, which eventually closed due to the environmental effects of the dammed river and the Argyle Diamond Mine. Many of Timms’s works are memorials to this vanished land.
From the 2023 exhibition Layered Histories: Indigenous Australian Art from the Kimberley and Central Desert, curated by Amelia Kahl, Barbara C. & Harvey P. Hood 1918 Curator of Academic Programming
Course History
FILM 48, SART 17, The Map, Mary Flanagan, Summer 2013
ANTH 3, Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, Sienna Craig, Summer 2013
GEOG 11, Qualitative Methods and the Research Process in Geography, Abigail Neely, Winter 2015
ANTH 50.33, Cartographic Encounters, Kenneth Bauer, Spring 2020
Geography 31.01, Postcolonial Geographies, Erin Collins, Fall 2023
Studio Art 17.08, Digital Drawing, Karol Kawiaka, Winter 2024
Studio Art 17.08, Digital Drawing, Karol Kawiaka, Winter 2024
Exhibition History
Layered Histories: Indigenous Australian Art from the Kimberely and Central Desert, Amelia Kahl, Curator, 5 August 2023 - 2 March 2024, Citrin Family Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire.
Provenance
Jinta Desert Art, Sydney, New South Wales; sold to Will Owen (1952-2015) and Harvey Wagner (1931-2017), Chapel Hill, North Carolina, date unknown; given to present collection, 2009
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