Invitation to Battersea Art Fair, Spring 8-12 March 2023

Bay Gallery Home is back at Battersea Art Fair for the Spring edition and would love to see you there.

The Private View is 8 March from 1700 - it’s always a fun evening out and the chance to view the many new beautiful works we have before anyone else does. Amongst our latest offering are new works by highly sought after artists including Ada Pula Beasley, Pammy Foster and Steven Jupurrurla Nelson.

If there is anything you would like to see in particular please let us know so we can make sure it’s at the show on the day you are attending. Over the next week or two we will be adding more paintings to the site so keep an eye on Bay Gallery Home’s website and Instagram for images and details.

You can apply the code using the link on the button below for your VIP tickets to the show.

See you there!

Barbara Weir - artist and advocate has passed away

Barbara Weir paintings from Bay Gallery Homes first London exhibition: My Mother’s Country, Grass Seed Dreamings

Bay Gallery Home was very sad to learn of Barbara’s passing on 3 January 2023.

Our journey with Aboriginal art began when Barbara’s son Fred Torres and my dear friend Leana visited us shortly after the birth of my daughter in 2008. During their visit it was decided I would expand my flourishing gallery business by representing the artists of Utopia in the UK.

By sheer coincidence my mother had spent two years in Utopia as a district nurse 17 years previously. On a visit to her in the Central Desert I met many members of Barbara’s extended family painting canvases on the desert sands at their outstations, long before the advent of the painting shed. My mother knew Barbara well and I had the opportunity of meeting her during the years I represented Utopia.

The first Aboriginal art exhibition I held nearly 15 years ago included many mesmerising and beautifully executed Grass Seed Dreaming’s and My Mother’s Country by Barbara. She was a versatile, passionate artist whose love for her country is reflected in each canvas she painted. Barbara was highly skilled in the use of dot work shown in her depictions of ‘My Mother’s Country’, and was ingenious in her use of colour, lines and texture as shown in ‘Grass Seed’ dreamings.

Born in 1945 Barbara’s life was full of challenges having to straddle the two cultures after being forcibly removed from her family by the Native Welfare Police. Barbara’s country was Atnwengerrp and her languages Anmatyerre and Alyawarr. Her father Jack Weir, the Irish owner of Bundy River station near Utopia had a relationship with her mother Minnie Pwerle. Both were imprisoned for their interacial relationship with Jack dying shortly after his release.

Barbara was forced to live in foster homes becoming one of the ‘Stolen Generation’ at nine having being told her family was dead - she was ostensibly told this because she continued to use her traditional languages and was moved from Alice Springs to Darwin. This was done to remove any vestiges of her Aboriginality and make her European enough to serve white families as a domestic servant.

At 18 she married Mervyn Torres and they moved to Papunya where they witnessed the genesis of the contemporary Aboriginal art movement. Torres later found out Barbara’s family was still alive and they were reunited. The reunion was tepid at the beginning with reintegration slow. Barbara had lost her languages and stories, however, the trauma of the removal was healed over time with Barbara relearning her culture under the guidance of family including “aunty” Gloria Petyarre.

Emily Kame Kngwarreye was a profound influence on Barbara as an adopted aunty and artist. This led to Barbara being integral to her families success as artists, including encouraging Minnie to take up the brush in her 80’s with her going on to become an internationally acclaimed artist along with many other family members.

During the 1970s Barbara became an active land rights activist. In 1985 she was elected as the first women president of the Indigenous Urapunta Council.

Barbara Weir will be sadly missed by all who knew her and everyone who has ever owned or enjoyed her artwork.

2023 begins with New Art from Tennant Creek, Australia

Bay Gallery Home wishes you a Happy New Year! Refreshed after a glorious holiday we have exciting news to share with our friends and clients for 2023. We have embarked on a collaboration with artists from Tennant Creek, Northern Territory, Australia.

Among the artists we have are Ada Pula Beasley and Pammy Foster, both rising stars in the Aboriginal art world. Their impressionist paintings, achieved with careful brush and dot work, are breathtakingly beautiful.

Ada paints her Country, many recent works by Central Desert artists depict the devastating fires, She explains: “After the bushfires, when the rain comes and brings back all the bush flowers and bush medicine back again and make it green, this [is] why I do this painting, reminds me when we go hunting after the bush fire and see just black, then it rains and brings flowers back and the trees and the blue skies, and the snappy gum trees up the hill."

Pammy Foster takes an abstract approach to the depiction of Country. Her work captures the rhythm of the landscape with repeated motifs and engages an exaggerated palette to emphasise seasonal changes in the environment.

These and many other beautiful works from the our desert communities will be available online and at the Spring Battersea Affordable Art Fair 9-12 March. VIP codes for VIP tickets will be shared with you shortly.

Building on a Sacred Site - National Aboriginal Art Gallery in Alice Springs

Mparntwe (Alice Springs) seeks to address its dwindling visiting numbers by building the National Aboriginal Art Gallery (NAAG) on Anzac Oval in the the centre of town.

This cultural initiative aims to celebrate 65,000 years of Aboriginal culture while controversially construction will be on a sacred women’s site. Doris Stuart Kngwarreye is an Arrente woman who is a senior custodian or Apmereke-Artweye for Mparntwe, a role she inherited through her father’s line when she was young. Stuart has opposed the proposed gallery site for years as the gallery’s proposed artworks will overlap the sacred sites and song lines of the traditional owners.

“If you put a building up there with stories that don’t belong there, how do you think the ancestors will feel towards that?” she said.

The prospect not only concerns the ancestors but indigenous, living artists like Western Arrarnta elder and artist Mervyn Rubuntja. "It's a women's site," he said. "You need to talk to the ladies first if they say yes or no, because it's important for every non-indigenous person to listen."

Despite consultations and recommendations that the gallery should be built in the Desert Knowledge Precinct, the Arrente women have been ridden over roughshod by the Labour MP Chansey Paech who took over the Arts, Culture and Heritage portfolio for the Northern Territory in 2020. Mr Paech, an Arrernte man, said Ms Stuart and her family had been invited into the consultations "at every stage".

The NT government have been accused of traditional owner shopping for approval for the Anzac Oval site. As such, custodian families are being torn apart, particularly as some of them don’t hold authority of the land in question.

Rather ironically NAAG does not currently hold an Aboriginal art collection and will rely on the consultative powers of Arrente woman Sera Bray to obtain art for the collection for the £130m project, due to start once the design consultation process ends late in 2023. As it is a sacred women's site, this may proof difficult.

For ABC article go to:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-09-14/national-aboriginal-art-gallery-new-name-flagged/101433054

Doris Stuart Kngwarreye on her home country. (ABC News: Kirstie Wellauer)

Christmas Celebration in Tetbury 2 December 2022

Bay Gallery Home will be hosting a Christmas party in the gallery to coincide with Tetbury town’s Christmas celebrations, including the famous Christmas light switch-on by Oliver star Mark Lester (yes, really).

All this can be enjoyed from the warmth of Bay Gallery Home as we are situated opposite the historic market hall, where the action takes place.

A steady flow of lovely Australian wine is being provided (usually the town crier samples the most because, he claims, he has to keep his throat lubricated for all that shouting he does) We’ll also have mulled wine and a delicious sharing platter beautifully assembled by local caterer Tailor-made.

I hope you also enjoy feasting on our range of unique gifts, which have arrived from Australia in time for Christmas. We have the obligatory socks for men (or women as they’re unisex), fragrant soaps, scented candles, new make up and toiletry bags. For the household with everything you can’t go past a gorgeous Coral Hayes tea towel or one of our amazing upside down umbrellas. These are in addition to the core collection of chinaware, salad servers, journals and our ‘My Country’ interiors collection with the ever popular cushions selling out fast.

And, of course, our paintings.

Party starts at 1730 until later. Please RSVP.

Art

Manchester Art Fair - Bay Gallery Home is exhibiting!

Bay Gallery Home will exhibiting in Manchester on 4-6 November. New artworks are winging their way to the UK from the Central Australian desert and we can’t wait to share them you. We’ve been busy uploading new paintings as they arrive so keep an eye on our website for new works.

If you would like to attend the VIP evening on 4 November please use the following code:

VIP Preview Night Promo Code: 22VIPMAF0111

We have unlimited free weekend tickets available for you to share as well using this promo code:

Weekend Promo Code: 22MAFWKD

Book your tickets to the UK’s most ambitious art fair! https://www.manchesterartfair.co.uk/ #MAF22

News

Battersea Art Fair Art Preview 2022 - Stand D8

Bay Gallery Home is bringing Central Desert Aboriginal art to Battersea Art Fair next week 19-23 October. It is our first foray at Battersea following a successful Affordable Art Fair in Hampstead Heath in May.

It’s 50 years since the genesis of the Aboriginal contemporary art movement with the establishment of Papunya Tula Artists being one of the first Aboriginal-owned art centres. Following the men of Papunya’s initiative Aboriginal art centres have sprung up across the desert. Each one is essential for the recording and sharing of Aboriginal culture, allowing it to flourish through an array of creative mediums.

Since then reputation of Aboriginal art has steadily grown, despite many significant challenges, as a legitimate contemporary art form with industry behemoths Sotheby’s including it in ‘Marquee Month’ auctions in New York..

Bay Gallery Home believes Australian Aboriginal artists are the most talented artists in the world with a never ending, dazzling array of artwork never ceasing to take your breath away. We are so excited to share the work of the desert communities we have represented for over 14 years with you at the Battersea Affordable Art Fair.

The Australian National Gallery recently acquired works by two of the artists we represent: Rosie Ngwarraye Ross and Maisie Petyarre Bundey. Both are established artist from famous painting families. Maisie is one of seven famous painting sisters from Utopia batik art movement including Kathleen Petyarre and Ada Bird Petyarre. Rosie’s mother was also among the artists in this early women’s art movement lasting 11 years before they were given canvases and brushes becoming major desert artists. Some of the canvases we are bringing hark back to the Utopian batik movement and are always popular for their delicate, precise brush work.

Bay Gallery Home will also be showcasing paintings by many younger artists who are producing really exciting work including Walter Jangala Brown (son of Ronnie Tjampitjinpa who work is in Steve Martins collection and recently featured on the Financial Times front page), his wife Valerie Napanangka Marshall also painting the Tingari Cycle and the ever popular Shanna Napapankga Williams painting her Seven Sisters Dreaming.

If you would like to make early bird purchases please go to www.baygalleryhome.com




News

Bay Gallery Home won the Fabric award!

Thank you to everyone who voted for us! A whopping 84,000 votes were cast across the categories and on Friday night the ‘My Country’ Aboriginal fabric collection was awarded the Fabric Award.

The Central Desert Aboriginal artists whose paintings we draw on for the designs are the winners of this award too, we can’t thank them enough for the privilege to work with them.

The skill of British designers and manufacturers also made this collection possible. Cheers to their perseverance in turning paintings into repeat patterns!

Design et al organised a wonderful award evening and we had a ball with those who joined us on table 21!

Alexandra from Bay Gallery Home wearing a custom made jumpsuit using ‘Ruth Blue’ velvet from a painting by Central Desert Aboriginal artist Ruth Nungarrayi Spencer.

International Design & Architecture Awards 2022 - Fabric Award

Bay Gallery Home has been shortlisted for the Fabric Award in the Design et al International Design & Architecture awards for ‘My Country’ fabric collection featuring the Dreamtime, bush medicine and bush tucker stories of Central Desert Aboriginal artists.

In 2015 we embarked on the journey to take the paintings and translate them onto fabrics, specifically cotton, linen’s and velvets. It is a great honour to have worked for the incredibly talented artists hailing 300km north west and north east of Alice Springs. It is even better that they’re talent is being recognised internationally at the Design et al award show.

The award ceremony is held on 23 September in the Grosvenor Hotel London. In addition to 25,000 interior designers eligible to vote we are hoping our wonderful customers will too.

Follow the link below to cast your votes. You can find Bay Gallery Home in Fabric category 25. It would be wonderful for Bay Gallery Home to win so please help us make that happen!

https://www.thedesignawards.co.uk/design-architecture-entrants-2022/

News

Battersea Art Fair 19-23 October 2022 - Invitation to Bay Gallery Home Stand D8

Bay Gallery Home would love you to join us at our first Battersea Art Fair in Battersea Park October 2022.

In May we exhibited at Hampstead Heath Affordable Art Fair where we met many people fascinated by the painting designs, the stories behind them and the Central Desert Aboriginal artists we represent. Some of our new buyers included people from Sotheby’s and the Tate among many others searching for high quality art for their homes, or offices. It’s was a great resource for interior designers too.

Many repeat clients continued to support the gallery with new purchases including the most amazing painting by Michelle Pula Holmes recently shortlisted for the $100,000 Hadley Art Prize in Australia (Australian Landscape).

In the run up to October we are increasingly excited about sharing new works with Aboriginal art novices as well as those who have supported Bay Gallery Home since opening our gallery 14 years ago.

Artists we’ve represented have gone on to become sought after including Athena Nangala Granites, Steven Jupurrurla Nelson, Betty Pula Morton and Rosie Ngwarraye Ross.

As a gallery our ethos is to make art inclusive so we endeavour to to keep the prices affordable. We offer emerging and established artists across many different sized canvases and styles directly from the Central Australian Desert Walpiri Country, Alyawerre Country and Atnwengerrp Country.

Please reserve your VIP ticket to the Battersea Affordable Art Fair from 19-23 October on the link below.

Look forward to seeing you there!

Summer holiday

Joycie Yellow wallpaper and artwork are by Central Desert artist Joycie Pitjara Morton.

Bay Gallery Home is closing for a short Summer holiday 28 July - 5 August 2022.

If you would like access to the gallery this can be arranged just call Alexandra on 07776 157 066 or email alexandra@baygalleryhome.com

We reopen Saturday 6 August.

Hope you are all having a lovely Summer.

Quasicrystals and the Origin of Life - featuring our Emu Dreaming tile

Yankirri Jukurrpa (Emu Dreaming) painting by Geraldine Nangala Gallagher, 2015

Bay Gallery Home was slightly perplexed when academic John Gardiner contacted us for permission to use our Emu Dreaming tile as an example for his work on Quasicrystals in the NeuroQuantology journal.

Initially Gardiner told me the paper concerned aperiodic tiles. What on earth is an aperiodic tile? After a quick online search it turns out it is not a non-periodic tile. That cleared up everything! In any case he went on to consider the tile design in terms of quasicrystals and the origin of life.

When John sent the paper we were quite touched by the inclusion of the importance of Aboriginals connection to Country, “The cultures revere the state of things, as they are found, and how this leads to survival. Geology uses fractals to describe landscapes and Australian Aboriginal culture is at the point where initiates ARE the fractal landscape, weather and other living beings. For something to exist within Aboriginal culture it must be present in the physical or metaphysical world. This encompasses both contemporary and more traditional Dreamings.”

Yankirri Jukurrpa (Emu Dreaming) sits in a place 50km north of Yuendumu called Ngarlikurngu. The Jukurrpa story belongs to Nangala/Nampijinpa women and Jangala/Jampijinpa men within the Walpiri people of the Central Desert of Australia.

The paper is a fascinating study of possible events leading to the origins of life, involving “crystals being the substrate for the formation of the first life”.

To read the full paper please click on the button below.

Art

Small(er) but perfectly formed paintings at Bay Gallery Home

Bay Gallery Home has curated a small(er) but perfectly formed painting gallery for your enjoyment.

Our offering starts small for those entering the market for the first time with larger pieces also available. However, we want to focus this Newsletter on the smaller works for those wanting to find an artwork for the niche spaces in your home or office on a smaller budget.

Bay Gallery Home has always recognised younger, emerging talent before they make it big. In the UK we are the perfect gallery to obtain exciting younger artists work before they are recognised nationally and internationally. By purchasing smaller artworks you can establish your first foothold in the art market at the beginning of an artists career while adorning your walls with something that gives you pleasure every day.

The ethos of our art gallery is to bring you high quality art and affordable prices. Is there space you want to fill that won’t break the bank? We have an array of colours and styles from broad strong brushstrokes to fine dot work. Visit us in our Tetbury art gallery or online www.baygalleryhome.com

News

Affordable Art Fair - thank you for coming!

Bay Gallery Home wanted to say a huge thank you to everyone who visited our stand during our first Affordable Art Fair in Hampstead Heath. And a special thank you to those who supported the Aboriginal artists we represent by buying from our selection of beautiful Aboriginal artworks.

Tetbury is located in the Cotswolds Area of Natural Beauty and is a wonderful place to visit especially during this time of year when all the roadsides are blooming with wild flowers.

Visit us to see more gorgeous art and our ‘My Country’ Aboriginal interiors collection translated from paintings by the Central Desert Aboriginal artists we represent. Bay Gallery Home offers wallpapers, fabrics, tiles and rugs with money from gallery sales going to the desert communities we represent.

We will also be at the Affordable Art Fair in Battersea in October and the Manchester Art Fair in November.

News

Invitation to Affordable Art Fair Hampstead Heath 4-8 May 2022

Bay Gallery Home is exhibiting at the Affordable Art Fair for the first time and extend a free invitation to the Fair to all our lovely customers who have supported us over the years. Please come and say hello to us on Stand D10. We have amazing new artworks from a range of artists painting their Dreamtime stories, bush medicine, bush tucker and their Country. For a preview please visit our website - more are on the way.

NEWS

Shortlisted for The Fabric Award: International Design and Architecture Awards

‘My Country’ botanical velvets - left to right Rosie Pink, Betty Pink, Daisy Brown, Lilly Green, Melita Dusty Pink

Exciting news! Bay Gallery Home’s innovative fabric collection has been shortlisted for a major award at this year’s International Design and Architecture Awards.

Our ‘My Country’ range has been chosen by the events’s curators, Design et al, to vie with famous brands like Liberty Fabrics for the prestigious Fabric Design Award. The winner will be chosen by a judging panel of 26,000 industry professionals and announced at the awards show in London in September.

The ‘My Country’ interiors collection has taken five years of dedication and investment to build and it is a joy to see it being recognised. It has been created against sometimes difficult challenges, including the pandemic, Australian wildfires, personal tragedies and, in the fabrics case, manufacturers going out of business just as the first prints came off the press, leaving me to start all over again.

So much has been poured into this creation, with us often to’ing an fro’ing across the world to spend days and nights in the car driving around our desert communities in search of beautiful Aboriginal artwork. It has a been a real family effort too - my mother is always at the wheel (driving 3000km from Brisbane) and my children squished into the back for the long journey from Alice Springs to “Outbush”.

Lots of adventures were had including my Mum greeting us at Lasseter’s Hotel in Alice in 2017 with a lump the size of a grapefruit on her lower leg. “Oh, don’t worry,” she shrugged as she helped load our bags into the boot. “It’s just a snake bite I got sleeping in the swag on the way here.”

There have been many hours spent slogging up and down the motorways of the UK searching of the right designers and manufacturers capable of making a product that can compete against the worlds best design houses.

‘My Country’ is a collection of 12 breathtaking designs - all taken from the work of some of the most talented artists among the oldest continuous race on Earth - on a range of five fabric bases. They are suitable for upholstery and soft furnishings including cushions, lamps and curtains.

Thank you to all those who have collaborated with us and bought from us over the years. We hope you agree it’s been worthwhile.

Wish us luck!

‘My Country’ fabrics are from paintings by: Lilly Kemarre Morton (Lilly Green) , Betty Pula Morton (Betty Pink) , Alana Ngwarraye Holmes (Alana Pink), Daisy Kemarre Turner (Daisy Brown), Joycie Pitjara Morton (Joycie Yellow), Michelle Pula Holmes (Michelle Blue), Rosie Ngwarraye Ross (Rosie Pink and Rosie Blue), Ruth Nungarrayi Spencer (Ruth PInk, Ruth Blue, Ruth Red) and Sarah Napurrurla Holmes (Bush Onion).

Images of some of them are below (left to right): Michelle Pula Holmes, Lilly Kemarre Morton, Betty Pula Morton, Rosie Ngwarraye Ross and Ruth Nungarrayi Spencer.

Photograph credits: Alexandra O’Brien, Adam Carter & Lara Damiani Think Films

News

Valentine Day Gift Ideas

Bay Gallery Home has many new gorgeous imported chinaware designs. Particularly lovely are the scented candles in fine bone china bowls featuring artwork by Aboriginal artists Coral Hayes Pananka and Nora Davidson.

The candle scents are devine!

There are many other Valentine gift ideas on our website including teapots, mugs, milk jugs, sugar bowls and platters, vases, cushions from the ‘My Country’ interior and of course our amazing original artworks by our Central Desert artists.

You can visit our Tetbury art gallery seven days a week or click below to visit our online shop.

New, News

Outback and Bay Gallery Home News

Image is from ABC News website see link below.

Sitting in my gallery, immersed in the rich beauty that has been generated by a community of Aboriginal artists far away in the Central Australian Desert I’ve received news from the other side of the world that the area where my artists live has been cut off by flooding. The sudden and often brutal monsoons that strike at this time of year are expected - it’s the wet season there - but this one has been more severe than usual.

Although I have made many trips to the Outback, the challenges these incredibly talented people have to overcome to make their work is never far from my mind.

This region has been left completely cut off for a week now. The dirt roads are under too much water for even the most robust vehicles to use, leaving those living there with dwindling supplies including food and, in the midst of their first Covid cases, vital medical supplies. The current situation has been described by local officials as “absolutely dire”.

At the community health clinic, there are just five medical staff to treat 600 patients. In recent days, they have had to handle three emergencies, including a birth, without access to Royal Flying Doctor Service support as the airstrip is completely inundated with water - it looks like a river.

From our gallery 12,000 miles away in Tetbury, we help support the Aboriginal art communities, as do many galleries across Australia and around the world, through the sale of the paintings, our ‘My Country’ interiors collection, homewares and accessories. This week we are excited to share our fabulous new rectangular cushions that have landed oh-so-softly in the gallery.

The limited run of locally-made soft furnishings, featuring the work of major art prize-winning Betty Pula Morton, Rosie Ngwarraye Ross, Melita Pitjara Morton (already sold out), Ruth Nungarrayi Spencer are plumped up and ready to go. You can see the collection on our Cushion page.

Over the weekend drop by our gallery and see what our artists are achieving in often very difficult circumstances. You’ll be as awestruck as I am every day.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-01-31/utopia-region-battles-covid-19-outbreaks-floods-no-phones/100790440

NEWS

New Year brings New Aboriginal artwork to Bay Gallery Home

As we enter 2022 we have been busy curating new Aboriginal paintings across a range of emerging and established artists, sizes, and styles from the Central Desert communities we represent.

Among our highlights above are larger works in subdued colour’s for lovers of lighter hues as well as three smaller paintings packing a dynamic punch with their bold colours.

Last week visitors expressed their delight at seeing the paintings “in the flesh” having discovered them online. While photographs of the paintings are beautiful its difficult to capture the texture and depth of the paintings in a photographic format. The many layers of colour applied to each artwork make them very tactile; the irregularities and (sometimes) random flicks of paint assure you that the paintings travelled all the way from the Central Australian desert bearing elements of the artists personality.

Over the course of 2022, Covid permitting, Bay Gallery Home is hoping to exhibit in various art fairs across the country. If you have any near you you’d like us to know about please let us know and we’ll endeavour to explore opportunities to exhibit our gorgeous Aboriginal art works there.

Thank you for continued support of Bay Gallery Home and the artists we represent. Hope to see you in Tetbury soon. All the best for 2022!

NEWS

That's a Christmas wrap! Closed for Christmas 23-29 December

Alana Pink wallpaper from a painting by Alana Ngwarraye Holmes.

Merry Christmas everyone!

After spending a few hours battling to upload a more Chistmassy shot we’ve admitted defeat and thought I’d share this with you instead.

Our gallery started in Tetbury six years ago with business slowly but steadily developing. This photo is from the early days, the image I was trying to share is much busier with the space filled with lengths of fabrics, cushions, pouffes, lamp shades, wallpapers and rugs from our ‘My Country’ Aboriginal interiors collection. Please go to our Instagram feed @baygalleryhome to see it.

Bay Gallery Home wishes you a happy and safe holiday period. It’s a tough time for many of us but together we will get through it and hopefully 2022 will see Covid erradicated. We open by appointment 23, 24, 27, 28 December. Between 29th December to 3rd January we will in but working limited hours. All online orders will be fullfilled postal hours allowing

Thank you all for supporting Bay Gallery Home, the artists we represent and all the other businesses our gallery works with, it really means the world to us.

Hope to see you in the New Year.

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