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Shop Yir (Dilly Bag) by Megan Wilfred
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Yir (Dilly Bag) by Megan Wilfred

A$95.00

Nunggayinbala people have used dilly bags for thousands of years for practical and ceremonial purposes, but not until recently were they made from repurposed ghost nets and shade cloth fabric.

Dilly bags, or “yir” in Nunggubuyu language, were traditionally made from pandanus or bark, and painted using different shades of ochre. Numbulwar artists have taken tradition to the next level by replicating the forms using found, contemporary materials that speak to the environmental deterioration of their homelands. Brightly coloured acrylics replace ochre stripes for clan identification and individual expression.

FREE SHIPPING within Australia. Contact us for international shipping rates.

Materials: Reclaimed Ghost Netting, synthetic polymer paint

Dimensions: 34 x 13 cm

Cat #454-24

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Nunggayinbala people have used dilly bags for thousands of years for practical and ceremonial purposes, but not until recently were they made from repurposed ghost nets and shade cloth fabric.

Dilly bags, or “yir” in Nunggubuyu language, were traditionally made from pandanus or bark, and painted using different shades of ochre. Numbulwar artists have taken tradition to the next level by replicating the forms using found, contemporary materials that speak to the environmental deterioration of their homelands. Brightly coloured acrylics replace ochre stripes for clan identification and individual expression.

FREE SHIPPING within Australia. Contact us for international shipping rates.

Materials: Reclaimed Ghost Netting, synthetic polymer paint

Dimensions: 34 x 13 cm

Cat #454-24

Nunggayinbala people have used dilly bags for thousands of years for practical and ceremonial purposes, but not until recently were they made from repurposed ghost nets and shade cloth fabric.

Dilly bags, or “yir” in Nunggubuyu language, were traditionally made from pandanus or bark, and painted using different shades of ochre. Numbulwar artists have taken tradition to the next level by replicating the forms using found, contemporary materials that speak to the environmental deterioration of their homelands. Brightly coloured acrylics replace ochre stripes for clan identification and individual expression.

FREE SHIPPING within Australia. Contact us for international shipping rates.

Materials: Reclaimed Ghost Netting, synthetic polymer paint

Dimensions: 34 x 13 cm

Cat #454-24

Featured
MEGAN WILFRED
May 5, 2023
MEGAN WILFRED
May 5, 2023

Megan Wilfred is a Ritharrngu artist from Walker River in South-East Arnhem Land. She lives and works in Numbulwar with her sisters and niece, and is renowned for her large, painted dilly bags made from reclaimed ghost nets.

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May 5, 2023

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