Full image of Minyma Mailiu by Teresa Baker, showing cool blue and violet tones that trace the journey of the ancestral woman Mailiu.
Alternate vertical angle of Minyma Mailiu highlighting the fluid linework and symbolic circles representing water and movement.
The artist Teresa Baker photographed beside her long blue painting Minyma Mailiu at Art by Farquhar Aboriginal Art Gallery.
"Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
"Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
"Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
"Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Full image of Minyma Mailiu by Teresa Baker, showing cool blue and violet tones that trace the journey of the ancestral woman Mailiu.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Alternate vertical angle of Minyma Mailiu highlighting the fluid linework and symbolic circles representing water and movement.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, The artist Teresa Baker photographed beside her long blue painting Minyma Mailiu at Art by Farquhar Aboriginal Art Gallery.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm

"Minyma Malilu" Teresa Baker 117cm x 36cm

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"Minyma Malilu"

Teresa Baker 

117cm x 39cm

Comes with certificate of authenticity

TB11736O5

"The painting tells the tale of Malilu, a significant being of creation. Malilu was a crippled woman. As she performed a sacred dance, she left distinctive tracks in the sand. Her two daughters abandoned her to get married, leaving her to fend for herself. It was difficult for her to gather bush foods and water because she had to drag her leg as she walked. Despite the challenges, she managed to collect desert raisins, bush tomatoes, berries, and various other wild foods through much effort."

Rooted in Dreamtime traditions, her dot paintings merge Anangu heritage with contemporary design, continuing the family legacy of Jimmy Baker and Kay Baker within the Western Desert art movement.

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