Artist signature and texture detail on Tansy Martin's 61x61cm bush onion Aboriginal painting
Square Aboriginal painting "Bush Onion" by Tansy Martin, 61x61cm, depicting native bush onion plants and desert landscape
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Artist signature and texture detail on Tansy Martin's 61x61cm bush onion Aboriginal painting
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Square Aboriginal painting "Bush Onion" by Tansy Martin, 61x61cm, depicting native bush onion plants and desert landscape

"Bush Onion" Tansy Martin 61cm x 61cm

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"Bush Onion"

Tansy Martin

61cm x 61cm

Comes with certificate of authenticity

TM6161AG

Bush onion, known in the Warlpiri language as yalka, is a highly valued bush tucker found across Central Australia. Traditionally gathered by women, these small bulbs are dug from the earth when the tops have dried and are eaten raw or cooked in hot sand and ashes. The bush onion is more than a food source, it is part of important Dreaming stories that belong to specific families and custodians.

In Aboriginal art, the rounded shapes and fine dotting often represent the onions themselves, their seeds, or the patterns of their growth across the land. Pathways and curved lines may depict the movement of people gathering them or the underground channels that nourish the plants.

Tansy Martin, a Warlpiri artist from Willowra and granddaughter of the renowned Nancy Napangarti Martin, paints these stories with meticulous dot work and earthy tones. Her Bush Onion paintings celebrate the life-sustaining knowledge passed down through generations, honouring both the spiritual and practical connections between people and Country.