Viewing ofReference Material
Art students and others conducting research are welcome to make an appointment with us to view the works listed in the adjacent table.
It is also recommended for Europeans to use the online search system at KVK (Karlsruher Virtueller Katalog), in which all German and many European scholarly libraries list their available references. Sometimes the works are available for loan.
A list of further references about Australian art, which however are not yet in our reference collection, is also maintained and continually extended.
Literature in our Collection
(A-L)
Hoost, Elke: A Short Intoduction into Aboriginal Art with a Special Focus on the Papunya Tula Painting Movement, Wissenschaftliche Hausarbeit zur Ersten Staatsprüfung, TU Dresden, 2003
Table of Contents ¦ Cover Text ¦ Book Review
Table of Contents
Table of Content -I-
List of Illustrations -III-
Introduction -1-
A Short Introduction into Aboriginal Art -4-
The Dreaming -4-
The Individual's Link with the Dreaming -9-
The Relationship with the Land -13-
Different Forms of Art -15-
Artists and Topics -17-
Reasons for Painting -18-
Iconography and Colours -20-
The Process of Painting and Possible Interpretations -24-
Copyright -26-
Reception and Recognition -28-
Diversity of Aboriginal Art -31-
Arnhem Land -32-
The Hermannsburg Watercolours -34-
The Central and Western Desert Regions -36-
Papunya, Kintore and Kiwirrkura -37-
Yuendumu and Lajamanu -39-
Utopia -40-
Balgo -42-
The Kimberley -43-
Urban Art -45-
The Papunya Tula Painting Movement -48-
The Beginnings -48-
The Situation at Papunya at Bardon's Arrival -48-
Painting the Murals -50-
The Very First Paintings -52-
Further Development -54-
The 1970s -54-
The 1980s -56-
The 1990s and the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century -58-
The Papunya Tula Artists Pty Ltd -61-
Some Artists and Their Paintings -65-
Johnny Warangkula Tjupurrula - A Comparison of His Early and Late Works -66-
The Depiction of the Kutungka Napanangka Story by Mick Namarari Tjapaltjarri and Walangkura Napanangka -73-
Conclusion -79-
Bibliography -81-
Sources of Illustrations -85-
Appendix -i-
Illustrations -ii-
Newspaper Article on Price Record -xix-
Kinship System of the Indigenous Groups of Central Australia -xx-
Notes on Terminology -xxi-
History of the Desert Art Movement -xxiii-
Maps -xxv-
Map of Australia -xxv-
Regional Map: Central Australia -xxvi-
Language Map -xxvii-