By Museum of Freedom and Tolerance
Evelyn Malgill & Emilia Galatis
Between the Fence and Freedom by Emilia Galatis
On a recent trip to the Warmun Art Centre, I was immediately struck by a suite of bright pink paintings by Evelyn Malgil.
I had just come back from LA at the time; they had a similar aesthetic to the cool, block-like minimalist art forms found in the laid-back art and design of contemporary California
They had this incredibly woke, hip aesthetic combined with a kinda ‘F’ you attitude towards the norm. They definitely had sass, sass in bucket loads; and Evelyn Malgil is as cool and sassy as her artwork suggests. She is a senior Traditional Owner for Winniper Springs, a special site about an hour out of Warmun. Her work carries a quiet authority in line with her cultural status.
Rose’s Yard (2016) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Rose's Yard (2016)
Ochre, acrylic paint and PVA fixative on canvas.
Note the juxtaposition of natural and man-made elements of the landscape; a reference to the impact of colonisation on traditional Country.
The 'station movement'
The Kimberley has wrestled with the difficult realities of what can be summarised as the ‘station movement’.
This movement underpins the economic disparity of the region that used free labour to build the wealth of the state and its devastating effects are well evidenced in art centre archives.
The ‘station movement’, still ongoing, can also be linked to mining and the ongoing fight for access to resources in traditional homelands.
Rose's Down Station (2014) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Rose's Down Station (2014)
Charcoal, acrylic paint and PVA fixative on canvas.
The specific imagery in Evelyn’s work hints at the tension between the settler structures and traditional Country. Gentle reminders of the unresolved narratives of place are evidenced in the dancing brolgas, fences and water tanks amongst Evelyn's majestic pink landscapes.
A simple black brush-stroked-fence within a cool, contemporary scene reminds me that someone cut that tree, shaped it by hand, dragged it somewhere and put up a fence, for a foreign animal, in the middle of pristine freedom.
Contemporary art investigates the difficult spaces and reflects on where we want to go. Evelyn's work is no exception. In Elsie Cliff, Bedford Downs Country (2016), Evelyn deals with the history of violence and destruction that is inevitably present in the landscapes of her Country.
Elsie Cliff, Bedford Downs Country (2016) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Elsie Cliff, Bedford Downs Country (2016)
Acrylic paint on canvas.
Evelyn says: "[This] is my old man’s mother’s Country, we call it Elsie Cliff. This big hill they got emu and kangaroo Dreaming there and if you go in that little gap you got spring in there."
"But over on that tree they been hanging people there, old people. You can see the shape of chains on that tree there if you go out that way."
The importance of Winniper Springs: sacred water
Evelyn's most joyful and sublime works are of Winniper Springs, where she is a senior Traditional Owner.
Winniper is a sacred site and an inland paradise about an hours' 4WD away from Warmun. You must ask permission before you go and be introduced to the water so you can safely enter the spring.
Winniper Springs III (2019) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Winniper Springs III (2019)
Ochre, acrylic paint and PVA fixative on canvas.
The palm trees pictured in many of Evelyn's paintings are iconic to Winniper Springs.
Winniper Springs (2015) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Winniper Springs (2015)
Acrylic paint on canvas.
Evelyn’s work is an excellent example of how art can make us feel and think differently about the accepted narratives of the shared place we all call home.
The quiet interplay between the fence and freedom reflects on the colonial history of the Kimberley, where happiness is found in sacred water.
Winniper Springs II (2015) by Evelyn MalgilMuseum of Freedom and Tolerance
Winniper Springs II (2015)
Acrylic paint on canvas.
Winniper: The Exhibition
Winniper: Works by Evelyn Malgil was first exhibited at Galerie pompom in Sydney, NSW, from 20 June to 19 July, 2020.
All artworks by Evelyn Malgil. Images courtesy of Warmun Art Centre.
Words by curator Emilia Galatis.