Gloria Tamerre Petyarre (b. 1945) is an Anmatyerr woman from Aknangkere Country, near Alice Springs. One of Australia's most acclaimed Aboriginal painters, she is probably the best-known Utopia artist after her late aunt, Emily Kame Kngwarreye. Petyarre and her six sisters grew up living a traditional lifestyle and speaking the Anmatyerre language. She first gained recognition for her batiks, exhibiting from 1977 with the Utopia Women's Silk Batik Group. She began painting in acrylics on canvas in the late 1980s, and since her first solo exhibition in 1991 has had a dedicated following of public and private collectors in Australia and internationally. Using layers of tapering dots, dashes and swirling lines, her many paintings portray Awelye (women’s ceremonies and body paint designs) and various Dreamings, including the Mountain Devil Lizard and her signature, Bush Medicine Leaves. Petyarre was awarded the Wynne Prize at the Art Gallery of NSW in 1999 for one of her Leaves works, the first Aboriginal artist to receive this coveted award for landscape painting. She retired in 2019 due to health issues.
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