Early life
Winnie Bamara was born in 1939 or 1940 in the South Australian Nullarbor Station near Ooldea on the East-West line. When she was seven, she was taken to theArtistic talent
She attended the mission school, a crowded galvanised iron building, where it was noticed that her learning had been affected by her time in hospital, but her teacher Miss M. Cantle noted and encouraged her drawing ability, giving her a box of watercolours with which it was found that, without any instruction, she could paint perspectively correct specific landscape scenes around Port Augusta, completely from memory. In a 1957 newspaper interview Cantle reported; Bamara became a teacher at the Mission School in her 20s. Bamara's image-making was in the Western representational styleWilson, S. C. (Shirley Cameron) & Dolling, Alison (1988). From shadow into light : South Australian women artists since colonisation. Delmont Pty Ltd, St. Peters, S. Aust, p.118, 173 and she was credited with a " photographic memory".'A Namatjira in skirts,' The Sydney Morning Herald, Sunday, Oct 27, 1957, p.13 She was the first Australian indigenous woman known to work in the realist manner. Attempts to provide her with lessons in a correspondence course, and from a visiting artist, proved fruitless, and Cantle supported the young artist's need to learn by herself. Nevertheless, in October 1957 teachers at the National Art School in Sydney, which had provided the correspondence course, granted her free tuition and that December she flew there and spent a week in the School, but was too reticent to talk to teachers or fellow students.'The shy girl wth photographic eyes', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sunday, Dec 8, 1957, p.3 Principal of the School, Mr. L. Roy Davies, said: "It is extraordinary that an untrained girl in an aborigine mission station should paint realistic pictures of her surroundings."Reputation
Bamara's talent attracted the attention of Adelaide and interstate newspapers. In 1959 photographerLater career
By 1961 Bamara had completed her first year of study at the South Australia School of Art in Adelaide where she was awarded the Frank and David Bulbeck Prize for most improved student in oils that year. She showed during 1963 in the '' Advertiser'' Open-Air Art Exhibition. In 1985, at 45, Bamara was still painting and was granted $1400 for the purchase of art materials from the Aboriginal Arts Board In 1987 Bamara, who lived near Maralinga, produced a painting for a poster protesting nuclear testing at Maralinga, for the Australian Council for Disarmament and Peace for Maralinga Day, 1987 which was produced by ''Common Ground'' Magazine with the support of the people of the Maralinga–Tjarutja community. Her image shows a nuclear bomb exploding on the Maralinga lands as three Indigenous people stand watching, with text that briefly discusses the history of the British Government testing of nuclear bombs at Maralinga.Personal life
In the 1960s Bamara married William Fredrick Smith (1942 – 2014) and their children were Russell, Robyn, Anthony, and Shona, and Eugene and Lillian, who were both deceased at the time of his death. The date of Bamara's death is not recorded, but she was noted as "the late" Winnie Bamara in husband Smith's 2014 obituary in the Adelaide ''Advertiser''. She is buried in the Port Augusta General Cemetery with Nellie Bamara.Reception
On viewing her work before her first exhibition, National Gallery of Australia director Robert Campbell remarked; Writing in '' The Canberra Times'' about the "Aboriginal Art Show" at the Academy of Science in Acton, Canberra, in which her work was shown with that of Gordon Waye and Bill Lennon, Melbourne critic John Reed called her "gifted", comparing her work with that of Belgian emigrant and Australian autodidact painter Henri Bastin.Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995), Friday 12 July 1974, page 12 Writers and critics often compared Bamara with Albert Namatjira, though she is now not as well remembered. Principal at the National Art School L. Ron Davies reported that; Bamara's work has since largely slipped from attention and at auctions in 2015 her work on paper fetched only $110, and her paintings less than $100.Exhibitions
*1959: ''An exhibition of watercolors by Winnie Bamara : sponsored by The Sunday Mail'', Public library lecture room, North Terrace, February 17–24 *1963: ''Advertiser'' Open-air Art Exhibition, Adelaide *1974: ''Aboriginal Art Show'' at the Academy of Science in Acton, Canberra *2010, May: ''Winnie Bamara – The shy girl with the photographic eyes'', Port Augusta Cultural CentreCollections
A painting by Bamara was presented to the President Sukarno of Indonesia, and one was purchased by Prince Philip. *National Museum of AustraliaReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bamara, Winnie Australian women artists Australian painters Aboriginal peoples of South Australia Aboriginal communities in South Australia Australian Aboriginal artists Indigenous Australian artists 20th-century births Year of birth uncertain Year of death unknown