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- Majarrdi Jukurrpa (Ceremonial Dancing Skirt Dreaming) - Judy Napangardi Watson
Majarrdi Jukurrpa (Ceremonial Dancing Skirt Dreaming) - Judy Napangardi Watson
Majarrdi Jukurrpa (Ceremonial Dancing Skirt Dreaming) - Judy Napangardi Watson 09/09p-88-99
Print on Paper, 40 x 30cm Paper, 26 x 20cm Image
$300
This print of Marjarrdi Jukurrpa (ceremonial dancing skirts) tells the story of an important element in much of Warlpiri ceremonial activity.
'Marjarrdi' is a hair string belt or skirt that 'karnta' (women) wear for ceremonial dances called 'Yawulya'. Hair is rolled into a string using a rubbing technique on the thigh and spun onto a stick spindle and then made into a belt or skirt.
In the time of the Jukurrpa ancestral hero, women of the Napangardi and Napanangka kinship subsections were living at Mina-Mina, far to the west of Yuendumu. The women travelled over their country performing ceremonies and dances wearing their 'majarrdi' (ceremonial dancing skirts).
This dreaming belongs to Napangardi/Napanangka women and to Japangardi/Japanangka men.
In contemporary Warlpiri paintings traditional iconography is used to represent the Jukurrpa, associated sites and other elements. In paintings of this dreaming, 'W' shapes are often used to represent the dancing skirts.