Big John Dodo
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John Dodo Nangkiriny (–2003), better known as Big John Dodo, was an
Indigenous Australian Indigenous Australians are people with familial heritage from, or recognised membership of, the various ethnic groups living within the territory of contemporary Australia prior to History of Australia (1788–1850), British colonisation. The ...
cultural leader and artist. He was a leader of the
Karajarri The Karajarri, also spelt Garadjara, are an Aboriginal Australian people of Western Australia. They live south-west of the Kimberleys in the northern Pilbara region, predominantly between the coastal area and the Great Sandy Desert. They now mo ...
people of the
Kimberley Kimberly or Kimberley may refer to: Places and historical events Australia Queensland * Kimberley, Queensland, a coastal locality in the Shire of Douglas South Australia * County of Kimberley, a cadastral unit in South Australia Ta ...
region of
Western Australia Western Australia (WA) is the westernmost state of Australia. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to the south, the Northern Territory to the north-east, and South Australia to the south-east. Western Aust ...
. As an artist, he was known for his sandstone carvings of human heads.


Biography

Dodo was born in about 1910 at Yilila, a locality near the Bohemia Downs Station, about from Bidyadanga Community, Western Australia. He was known as a skilled stockman and worked on various
cattle station In Australia and New Zealand, a cattle station is a large farm ( station is equivalent to the American ranch), the main activity of which is the rearing of cattle. The owner of a cattle station is called a '' grazier''. The largest cattle stati ...
s in the
Kimberley Kimberly or Kimberley may refer to: Places and historical events Australia Queensland * Kimberley, Queensland, a coastal locality in the Shire of Douglas South Australia * County of Kimberley, a cadastral unit in South Australia Ta ...
. His work included "branding, fencing, maintaining water supplies and droving cattle to Meekatharra in a trip on horseback that could take 12 to 16 weeks". Dodo spent decades living at Anna Plains Station but he and his wife Rosie Munroe were evicted in the 1960s when Anna Plains was sold to new owners. They lived on another station for around 18 months before moving to the La Grange mission at Bidyadanga, where Dodo spent most of the rest of his life. He died in Broome in 2003 and was interred at Bidyadanga.


Cultural leadership

Dodo was an
initiated Initiation is a rite of passage marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its formal components. In an extended sense, it can also signify a transformatio ...
member of the
Karajarri The Karajarri, also spelt Garadjara, are an Aboriginal Australian people of Western Australia. They live south-west of the Kimberleys in the northern Pilbara region, predominantly between the coastal area and the Great Sandy Desert. They now mo ...
people whose traditional lands lie around
Lagrange Bay Lagrange Bay is located south of Broome, Western Australia in the Kimberley region. It is the site of the Catholic Pallottine ''La Grange Mission'', and the Aboriginal community of Bidyadanga Bidyadanga, also known as La Grange, is the lar ...
in the West Kimberley. However, he was initiated at Yawinya, located within Anna Plains Station on the traditional lands of the Nyangumarta. After settling at Bidyadanga, Dodo played a key role in maintaining a distinct cultural identity for the Karajarri following the state government's forcible resettlement of Mangarla and
Nyigina The Nyikina people (also spelt Nyigina and Nyikena, and listed as Njikena by Tindale) are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia. They come from the lower Fitzroy River (which they call ''mardoowarra''). ...
people from the
Great Sandy Desert The Great Sandy Desert is an interim Australian bioregion,IBRA Version 6.1
data
at the La Grange mission. He was regarded as a ''pirrka'' (authority on tribal law). In 1995, Dodo initiated a
native title Aboriginal title is a common law doctrine that the land rights of indigenous peoples to customary tenure persist after the assumption of sovereignty to that land by another colonising state. The requirements of proof for the recognition of ab ...
claim over the Karajarri's traditional lands, which was granted in 2002 in the name of "John Dudu Nangkiriny and Others on behalf of the Karajarri People". Federal Court judge Anthony North held evidentiary hearings at Bidyadanga, where Dodo – aged 90 – gave evidence of locations he had visited as a child with his parents and of the relationships between physical places and the Karajarri ''pukarrikarra'' ( Dreaming).


Artwork

According to Dodo, he produced his first head in about 1938 or 1939 when he was working at Anna Plains, carving a man's face out of mud with a pocket knife. His work attracted the attention of visiting anthropologist
Helmut Petri Helmut Petri (7 November 1907 – 21 June 1986) was a German anthropologist. Life Petri was born in Cologne and received his early education both there and in Berlin. He began his university studies in 1928, taking in Economics, History and Ph ...
. Dodo resumed his human head sculptures in the 1960s after settling at Bidyadanga, using mud and wood at first and later moving to limestone and sandstone. He was asked to carve a stone head of Jesus for the mission church. He used an image of the
Shroud of Turin The Shroud of Turin (), also known as the Holy Shroud (), is a length of linen cloth that bears a faint image of the front and back of a naked man. Because details of the image are consistent with depiction of Jesus, traditional depictions o ...
as a model, with the resulting sculpture used as an
altarpiece An altarpiece is a painting or sculpture, including relief, of religious subject matter made for placing at the back of or behind the altar of a Christian church. Though most commonly used for a single work of art such as a painting or sculpture, ...
. Dodo's primary source of sandstone was Mount Phire (Karajarri: ''Payarr''), a small hill located near
Eighty Mile Beach Eighty Mile Beach also spelled Eighty-mile Beach or 80-mile Beach, and formerly called 90-mile Beach, lies along the north-west coast of Western Australia about half-way between the towns of Broome and Port Hedland. Despite its name, it is so ...
around south of Bidyadanga. The hill was surrounded by scattered pieces of stone, which according to Dodo's account of the Karajarri Dreaming were made when an ancestral family violated a taboo around consuming
goanna A goanna is any one of several species of lizard of the genus ''Monitor lizard, Varanus'' found in Australia and Southeast Asia. Around 70 species of ''Varanus'' are known, 25 of which are found in Australia. This varied group of carnivorous r ...
eggs. The family then hid from the
Rainbow Serpent The Rainbow Serpent or Rainbow Snake is a common deity often seen as the Creator deity, creator God, known by numerous names in different Australian Aboriginal languages by the many List of Australian Aboriginal group names, different Aborigina ...
on Mount Phire, which "attacked the mountain itself, biting off large chunks of rock".


Commercialisation

In the 1970s, Dodo's heads came to the attention of art dealer Mary Macha, who made regular collecting trips to the Kimberley and sold a number of heads from her gallery in
Perth Perth () is the list of Australian capital cities, capital city of Western Australia. It is the list of cities in Australia by population, fourth-most-populous city in Australia, with a population of over 2.3 million within Greater Perth . The ...
. His work later caught the interest of British businessman Lord McAlpine, a tourism promoter in Broome. McAlpine commissioned 100 heads from Dodo at AU$1,000 per head (). According to anthropologist John Stanton, this represented "an incredible amount of money in a period of high unemployment for Australia, and for remote Aboriginal people who were among the most impoverished in the country". Dodo's work initiated what John Mateer has described as an "almost unknown minor art movement ..now poorly known even among historians of Indigenous art". Other Karajarri people – including Ian Gilbert, Matthew Gilbert, Teddy Hunter and Darcey Hunter – were inspired by the lucrative nature of Dodo's work to produce human head sculptures of their own.


Reception and analysis

Dodo's works are held by the
National Gallery of Australia The National Gallery of Australia (NGA), formerly the Australian National Gallery, is the national art museum of Australia as well as one of the largest art museums in Australia, holding more than 166,000 works of art. Located in Canberra in th ...
(NGA) in Canberra, the
Berndt Museum of Anthropology The Berndt Museum of Anthropology is an anthropological museum in Perth, Western Australia, founded in by Ronald Berndt and Catherine Berndt. It is currently, , located with the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery on the western side of the Univers ...
in Perth, and the
Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute The Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, usually referred to as Tandanya, is an art museum located on Grenfell Street in Adelaide, South Australia. It specialises in promoting Indigenous Australian art, including visual art, music a ...
in Adelaide. His heads were initially exhibited with other
Indigenous Australian art Indigenous Australian art includes art made by Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders, including collaborations with others. It includes works in a wide range of media including painting on leaves, bark painting, wood carving, rock ...
, but later included in general portraiture, including two exhibitions by the
National Portrait Gallery National Portrait Gallery may refer to: * National Portrait Gallery (Australia), in Canberra * National Portrait Gallery (Sweden), in Mariefred *National Portrait Gallery (United States), in Washington, D.C. *National Portrait Gallery, London ...
in 1999 and 2003. Two of Dodo's works featured in ''Tactility'', a 2003 NGA exhibition curated by Brenda L. Croft, with the curator noting "affinities with the western tradition of the creation of busts as portraits which were popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries". Art historian Darren Jorgensen has described Dodo's works as "largely anomalous and idiosyncratic" and placed them as a transitional form of Indigenous Australian art, "neither classical, emulating pre-colonial forms, nor
contemporary Contemporary history, in English-language historiography, is a subset of modern history that describes the historical period from about 1945 to the present. In the social sciences, contemporary history is also continuous with, and related t ...
, produced with entirely new materials such as paint and canvas".


References


Sources

* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Dodo, Big John 1910s births 2003 deaths 20th-century Australian sculptors 21st-century Australian sculptors Australian Aboriginal artists Australian stockmen Indigenous Australians from Western Australia People from the Kimberley (Western Australia) Year of birth uncertain