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Welcome to Injalak Arts Centre, a captivating hub of creativity nestled in the heart of Gunbalanya, in Australia’s Northern Territory.

Knotted pandanus handbag

Alicia Mardday

This handbag is made from natural, local materials sourced from the Gunbalanya area. Weavers gather fresh young leaves from the pandanus palm using a hooked stick, then strip and dry them. The pandanus is then boiled up on the campfire with local plant dyes.

This piece is made using the knotted pandanus technique. Kunwinjku women have been developing the artform for almost 100 years, experimenting with new forms and adapting it to local materials. The old plant dyes used in Europe like indigo, saffron, woad and logwood fell out of use with the Industrial Revolution. But here, a natural “paintbox” thrives. The most common dyes include: Yellow-orange: Mandjurndum (the bright orange roots of the Pognolobus reticulatus bush), Brown: Wirdilwirdil (the red bulb of Haemadorum breviculae grass), Green: The growing shoot of the pandanus itself (Pandanus spiralis), boiled with the ashes of pandanus leaves. Purple-pink – Windilk (the seeds of the Haemodorum coccineum plant, related to Kangaroo Paw), Grey-Black – Manbedde (the leaves of the quinine bush, Petalostigma pubescens). Source: Louise Hamby (ed.) “Twined Together”.

Cat no. :
867-22
Category :
Size :
18 x 22 x 48 cm
Medium :
Pandanus Fibre and Natural Dyes
Status :
In stock

$450.00

1 in stock

Other artwork

by Alicia Mardday