Yvonne Koolmatrie
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2016
South Australian Ruby Awards – South Australian Premier’s Award for Lifetime Achievement
2015
Yvonne Koolmatrie | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1944 (age 81–82) |
| Known for | Weaving |
| Awards | Red Ochre Award 2016 South Australian Ruby Awards – South Australian Premier’s Award for Lifetime Achievement 2015 |
Yvonne Koolmatrie (born 1944) is an Australian artist and weaver of the Ngarrindjeri people, working in South Australia.[1]
Career
Koolmatrie learned her craft in the early 1980s from elder and weaver, Dorothy Kartinyeri. Their coiled bundle technique uses local spiny-headed sedge (Cyperus gymnocaulos), known to the artist as bilbili and river rushes,[2] and Koolmatrie is credited with saving the traditional Ngarrindjeri craft.[3] Koolmatrie is defiant in using her practice to dismantle the colonial myth that Ngarrindjeri culture and weaving practices are extinct. Her work stands as a testimony that the practice is alive and continuing.[4] Her weavings include eel traps, turtles, mats, bowls and models of biplanes.[1] She was excited by the potential offered by woven sedge grass and this was seen, by Stephen Gilchrist as having "freed her imagination to breathe life into the fantastic woven articulations that are now her trademark".[5] Koolmatrie work is influenced by Janet Watson's woven works monoplane (1942) and bi-plane (1942) in the South Australia Museum, Watson is an Australian indigenous woman who learn't weaving from her family.[4]
Her works are included in many major galleries including the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan; South Australian Museum; National Museum of Australia; Art Gallery of Western Australia; National Gallery of Victoria; and National Gallery of Australia.[3]
In 1997, she was selected to represent Australia at the 47th Venice Biennale with Judy Watson and Emily Kame Kngwarreye.[6] In 2016 she was awarded the Red Ochre Award, peer-assessed recognition.[3]
In 2017, Koolmatrie was represented in the third national Indigenous Art Triennial, Defying Empire, four of her woven works were included. River Dreaming (2012) was previously acquired by the National Gallery of Australia in 2016.[7]