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Born Yinjirri c.1944-6, he lived at Lajamanu. His country was Waparlingki, north-east of Mt Doreen station and Jila Well, Yunga (a site closely connected to Warlukurlangu – 'after the Warlukurlangu mob sing’), Warntapari (where the Water Dreaming 'finishes up’), Makarrangu (Dog Dreaming, which only Jimmy’s family may paint), Jurntuwarriji (from his grandfather) and Ngurlurlirrinya. The Dreamings he paints are Pamapardu (Flying Ant), Malikijarra (Two Dogs Dreaming), Watiyawarnu, Ngapa and Purruparnta (occasionally). He worked with his wife, Denise Tasman Napangardi , and started painting in 1986 with the original group at Lajamanu. One of the best known painters in Lajamanu, he took dances, songs and paintings to Sydney, Perth and Adelaide, the United States and Paris. He is remembered by some in Paris for taking a trunk full of boomerangs and setting up a roadside stall on one of the main boulevardes – an amazing and colourful individual, who attended the very first exhibition of the Lajamanu artists at the Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi in Melbourne in 1987. He had plans to return to the USA. He lived in Lajamanu with his two wives and nine children, and taught dancing to young boys at Lajamanu school.

Writers:
Johnson, Vivien
Date written:
1994
Last updated:
2011

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Related people
  • Tasman, Denise Napangardi (associate of)
  • Tasman, Denise Napangardi (spouse of)
Related collections
  • National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Vic. (collected in)