"Piltati" original Aboriginal painting by Tjimpuna Williams, 145cm x 93cm - authentic Indigenous Australian artwork
"Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - detail view of Aboriginal painting, 145cm x 93cm
"Piltati" Aboriginal art by Tjimpuna Williams - close-up detail, 145cm x 93cm
Tjimpuna Williams with original painting "Piltati" - Aboriginal artist
"Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - alternate view, original Aboriginal painting, 145cm x 93cm
"Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - gallery view, authentic Indigenous Australian art, 145cm x 93cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Piltati" original Aboriginal painting by Tjimpuna Williams, 145cm x 93cm - authentic Indigenous Australian artwork
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - detail view of Aboriginal painting, 145cm x 93cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Piltati" Aboriginal art by Tjimpuna Williams - close-up detail, 145cm x 93cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Tjimpuna Williams with original painting "Piltati" - Aboriginal artist
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - alternate view, original Aboriginal painting, 145cm x 93cm
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, "Piltati" by Tjimpuna Williams - gallery view, authentic Indigenous Australian art, 145cm x 93cm

"Piltati" Tjimpuna Williams 145cm x 93cm

Regular price
$2,800.00
Sale price
$2,800.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

"Piltati"

Tjimpuna Williams

145cm x 93cm

Comes with certificate of authenticity

Ask staff to view D23

"There were two sisters who married two brothers, and they all lived together. One day, the women wandered off so far that they forgot about their husbands. Back at the camp, the brothers began to wonder, "Where are our wives?" and decided to go in search of them. One brother asked, "What should we become to look for them?" and the other replied, "Why don’t we turn into Rainbow Serpents?" So, they traveled through the sky, searching for their wives from above.

Eventually, they spotted the sisters hunting for carpet snakes and placed something in the hole where the women were digging. The women found it and moved to dig another hole, where again, the men had left something behind. This is how the brothers lured the women back to Piltati, where they transformed the sisters into Wanampi, swallowed them, and kept them in their throats. All four now live together in the waterhole and remain there to this day."