Buy original Seed Dreaming artwork by Marshall Jangala Robertson featuring intricate dots and traditional inspiration
Seed Dreaming Aboriginal painting by Marshall Jangala Robertson with detailed flowing dots and cultural significance
Marshall Jangala Robertson Aboriginal dot art Seed Dreaming showing flowing patterns inspired by ancestral stories
"Seed Dreaming" original Aboriginal painting by (Ngulu Jukurrpa) Marshall Jangala Robertson, 117cm x 74cm - authentic Indigenous Australian artwork
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Buy original Seed Dreaming artwork by Marshall Jangala Robertson featuring intricate dots and traditional inspiration
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Seed Dreaming Aboriginal painting by Marshall Jangala Robertson with detailed flowing dots and cultural significance
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Marshall Jangala Robertson Aboriginal dot art Seed Dreaming showing flowing patterns inspired by ancestral stories
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Seed Dreaming" original Aboriginal painting by (Ngulu Jukurrpa) Marshall Jangala Robertson, 117cm x 74cm - authentic Indigenous Australian artwork

"Seed Dreaming" (Ngulu Jukurrpa) Marshall Jangala Robertson 117cm x 74cm

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"Seed Dreaming" (Ngulu Jukurrpa)

Marshall Jangala Robertson

117cm x 74cm

MR74117F - P

Seed Dreaming, also known as Watiya Warnu Jukurrpa and Ngulu Tjukurpa in the Pitjantjatjara language, depicts the ancestral tracks of seed gathering in spinifex and mulga country. The ancestor journeyed from Ngurlupurranyangu toward Mount Liebig, collecting seeds from the watiya warnu tree and carrying them in traditional food carriers called parrajas, including one carried on the head.

Back at camp, large windbreaks were erected and seeds were winnowed in the late afternoon. Immature seeds were ground into a paste used as a traditional digestive medicine. This Dreaming is owned by Nampijinpa and Nangala women as well as Jampijinpa and Jangala men, and forms an important part of cultural knowledge and ceremony.

Marshall Jangala Robertson conveys these ancestral tracks through finely detailed dot work and flowing movement, with a refined monochromatic palette that evokes both the landscape and the story. His painting captures the rhythm of land, labour, and renewal, honouring the deep connection between people, Country, and culture.