Label TextThis painting depicts three feathered morning star poles (banumbirr) among yams, witchetty grubs, maggots, butterflies, and stingrays (the artist’s totem). The poles are used in initiation ceremonies and for communication with the deceased. During the Creation Period, as the moon set and the sun rose, the morning star (a planet) entered the sky, tracing the east to west journey of the ancestral Djankg’kawu sisters from the island of the spirits of the dead. At twilight, the deceased spirits performed a ceremony, kicking up the island sand as they danced and bringing darkness across the land. Today, the morning star ceremony is invoked, at dawn, to allow communication between the living and the dead. The daily ascent of the morning star is symbolic of the cycle of life.
Gali Yalkarriwuy Gurruwiwi is a custodian of morning star poles and is best known for his morning star pole sculptures, consisting of ochres, feathers, and bush string on wood.
(Exhibition label, 2017)