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Rare Earth Foundation works with young people to preserve and promote Indigenous culture through media, technology and the arts.
This is a personal request. By buying a piece of art you will enable us to continue delivering programs for Aboriginal youth and elders. Plus you will be investing in a valuable piece of Australian culture.
There are five paintings by two highly respected Aboriginal artists from the world-renowned Papunya community, Watson Corby and Sammy Butcher. All painting are available for viewing in central Sydney. Contact us for details.
Thankyou for your support.

Rahm and Meleuka, Founders
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| “Water Dreaming” |
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Watson’s “Water Dreaming” paintings are from Talerada, near Lake Mackay in the Northern Territory. The Water dreaming story tells of how to find water and how to travel from one water hole to the next.
The concentric circles represent water holes, the dots and unique snake-like swirls express the landscape. “I continue painting my fathers and grandfathers Dreamtime stories, just as they have done.”
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Acrylic on Linen
1010mm x 1230mm
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| “Fire Dreaming with Snakes” |
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Watson’s painting “Fire Dreaming with Snakes" is from Talerada, close to Lake Mackay in the Northern Territory. Watson’s unique style of curved, snake-like swirls, fused with traditional dotting, is a contemporary expression of ancient Dreaming stories.
The use of fire for back-burning is an important part of land management. In central Australia there are vast plains that are used for hunting grounds. At the right time of year fires were lit to flush out animals and ensure bushfires would not run rampant across the country. The long, curved lines represent snakes; the concentric circles with the four horizontal lines represent hunters waiting at their campfires.
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Acrylic on Linen
850mm x 850mm |
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| “Budgie Dreaming” |
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Watson Corby’s painting “Budgie Dreaming” is from a major waterhole near Jtunti (meaning a rock shelf or a cave) in the Northern Territory. Amongst the outback browns and greens, curves of blue and aqua bring water to the surface. Budgerigars gather at the edges to drink, moving with the changes of season. People would come to this waterhole to dig for fresh water, guided by the birds. The concentric circles in the centre of the composition represent the waterholes and around it on all sides are the sources of water.
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Acrylic on Linen
850mm x 850mm |
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“Pikilyi” – Snake Dreaming
(Both paintings are the same story) |
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Sammy’s country, Pikilyi, is Snake Dreaming country. Pikilyi is a large and important water hole and natural spring near Mount Doreen station, represented by the concentric circles. Pikilyi Jukurrpa (Vaughan Springs Dreaming) tells of the home of the rainbow serpents, ancestral heroes, who lived together as man and wife. Women of the Napanangka and Napangardi skin group would groom the serpents and for this service would be allowed to take water from the sacred spring. The serpents were the ‘kirda’, or ceremonial owners, for that country. The spirits of these two rainbow serpents are still at Pikilyi today.
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Acrylic on Linen
850mm x 850mm |
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Acrylic on Linen
850mm x 850mm |
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