(via Marble sculpture by Italian artist Fabio Viale – @fabforgottennobility on Tumblr)

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(via Marble sculpture by Italian artist Fabio Viale – @fabforgottennobility on Tumblr)
APY Lands Art: The Living Story of the Seven Sisters
Across the vast deserts of South Australia, the APY Lands have become home to one of the most dynamic and internationally celebrated movements in contemporary Aboriginal art. Rich in colour, cultural authority, and spiritual depth, APY paintings often draw upon the great ancestral narratives of the Western Desert, especially the epic Seven Sisters Dreaming that stretches across Australia through an immense network of songlines.
Artists from communities such as Amata, Ernabella, Fregon, Indulkana, and Mimili transform ancient cultural knowledge into powerful contemporary works filled with sweeping landscapes, sacred sites, ancestral journeys, and vibrant fields of colour. Their paintings are not simply images of the desert but expressions of Country itself—recording relationships between people, place, ceremony, and law that have endured for countless generations.
Today, APY Lands Art is admired worldwide for its bold innovation, extraordinary colour palettes, and the strength of the cultural traditions that continue to inspire it. Through these remarkable works, viewers gain insight into one of the world's oldest living cultures and the enduring power of the Seven Sisters story across the Australian desert.
Léon Bonnat (French 1833-1922) Le Barbier de Suez, 1876
SWIMMER BY GEORGE QUAINTANCE (1947)
Yar Biar by Gustavo Chams for Glamcut Magazine May 2026
Claudia Lamprea by Elliott and Erick Jimenez for Family Style Magazine Issue 9
“Tête” (1911) ◈ Amedeo Modigliani · Stone sculpture
Marcello TOMMASI (1928 - 2008) - Le Désespoir
Joseph Rivière (1912-1961) - L'homme qui tombe, 1952
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
- The Third Generation
1979
undercover by jun takahashi f/w 2006
Photographed by Yuji Watanabe for Reserved