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 glenelgartgallery@bigpond.com.au

“The Little Shop” and Gallery

15 Moseley Street, Glenelg SA.. 5045

Just off Jetty Rd at beach end turn at Wendy’s
just one block down on beach side
 

Dymocks Books Mezzanine

 55 Jetty Rd. (half way down on left with back to beach)  Glenelg SA. 5045
Free trams up and down Jetty Rd.

GLENELG ART GALLERY

Phone: (+ 61 4) 08  8376  8857   AH 0410 481 237 email - glenelgartgallery@bigpond.com.au

VIP Patrick Wines MOP logo JPEG

A big “thankyou” to PATRICK of Coonawarra Wines for their fantastic support during our SALA openings - “We do Love to SALA by the Seaside” and everyone loved the Mother of Pearl range which was featured !

WangWang&Funi

PANDA WATCHES
www.pandawatches.com.au

EMERGING & ESTABLISHED AUSTRALIAN ARTISTS - INDIGENOUS AND NON INDIGENOUS HERITAGE. - LOCAL AND INTERSTATE  - COMMISSION WORK TO SUIT YOUR DECOR, Business or Home

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Angela Souter. South Australian Artist. “South to Broadway” 

Jake Brookes
“The All Seeing Eye”
 

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John Gould Limited Edition Print Collection.

A rare and beautifull addition to your decor.

All numbered and stamped by the British Museum

Alison Mullvihill is showing at at “The Little Shop & Gallery”, 15 Moseley Street, Glenelg, Sth Australia, for the SALA Festival
 

These paintings are from Iwantja Arts & Crafts, via Alice Springs
by a lady named Rosemary Baker.

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Janet Forbes

“Country”

These are the rock holes, rivers and sand hills of the Ngaanyatjarra lands.

75 x 75 cm acrylic on canvas

CURRENT EXHIBITIONS / WORKS CATALOGUE

Once marginalized by the Western art world, aboriginal art has earned international acclaim over the past four decades, and the gallery is presenting a revealing survey by some of its most talented practitioners. Artists represented include Betty Mbitjana, Walangkura Napanangka, Ningura Napaurrula, Takariya Napaltjari, and Gabriella Possum Nungurrayi.

Many of the works on display make reference to the "Dreamtime," during which creation is believed to have taken place. The term can be understood as the "timeless time" or a period of formative creating or perpetual creation. The Dreamtime involved the creation ancestors' travels, still followed today by those who seek traditional wisdom along dream paths leading to important cultural sites all over the country.

Through this fashion, art links Aboriginal people not only to their history but also to the land itself. A new generation of artists is keeping the tradition alive by tapping the distinctive, eye-catching symbols and designs.

The "Dreaming" stories are considered intellectual property among the diverse indigenous Australians and are passed on protectively from generation to generation, especially among those who retain tribal connections.

SOLD

Joylene Haynes - Ceduna

CONTACT US FOR MORE INFORMATION