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Mako Djang

Print
1999 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Peter Nabarlambarl is one of an older generation of Aboriginal artists who have achieved considerable recognition outside Australia. His subjects are drawn form Aboriginal myth. This print shows the male Rainbow Serpent, Ngaloyd, flanked by three didgeridoos or ‘mako’.

According to Aboriginal mythology, the mother Rainbow Serpent, after entering mainland Australia from the sea, metamorphosed into the Earth Mother and gave birth to many children, including Ngaloyd. He takes many forms but usually has a snake-like body and a head like a crocodile with horny spikes. He is credited with the formation of the landscape, his serpent form enabling him to shift earth.

Associated with watering holes, land, social relationships and fertility, the Rainbow Serpent is the subject of many images in a society where land use and ownership are key issues. Although some of these images are thought to be by human hand, others are seen as traces left by the serpent himself.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Mako Djang (assigned by artist)
  • Didgeridoos and Sacred Place (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Brush-bite etching with colour printing ink
Brief description
'Mako Djang' ('Didgeridoos and sacred place'), etching in red linear criss-cross pattern of snake like creature and three digeridoos, by Peter Nabarlambarl, Darwin, 1999
Physical description
Etching printed in red. An image of a serpent like creature bent in a closed 'V' shape, with head and tail uppermost. On his left are two long stick like shapes and to his right a third stick like shape. Both the body of the serpent and the stick like shapes ( which are didgeridoos) are depicted in triangles of diagonal red stripes.
Dimensions
  • Plate height: 49.2cm
  • Plate width: 34.2cm
  • Sheet height: 68cm
  • Sheet width: 54cm
Production typeLimited edition
Copy number
77/99
Marks and inscriptions
  • Marked with the artist's thumb print just below the image on the right hand side.
  • 'Mako Djang' (Inscribed in pencil below the image)
  • '77/99' (Inscribed in pencil on the left with the edition number)
Credit line
Purchased through the Julie and Robert Breckman Print Fund
Subjects depicted
Summary
Peter Nabarlambarl is one of an older generation of Aboriginal artists who have achieved considerable recognition outside Australia. His subjects are drawn form Aboriginal myth. This print shows the male Rainbow Serpent, Ngaloyd, flanked by three didgeridoos or ‘mako’.

According to Aboriginal mythology, the mother Rainbow Serpent, after entering mainland Australia from the sea, metamorphosed into the Earth Mother and gave birth to many children, including Ngaloyd. He takes many forms but usually has a snake-like body and a head like a crocodile with horny spikes. He is credited with the formation of the landscape, his serpent form enabling him to shift earth.

Associated with watering holes, land, social relationships and fertility, the Rainbow Serpent is the subject of many images in a society where land use and ownership are key issues. Although some of these images are thought to be by human hand, others are seen as traces left by the serpent himself.
Collection
Accession number
E.256-2005

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Record createdNovember 26, 2005
Record URL
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