Summary
This handbag form was developed from the mission influenced 'sister' baskets that have matching identical sides of circular coiled mat forms. However in this style a central oval 'mat' has been added to separate the sides and form the handbag. It has long rigid handles that allow the basket to be carried over the shoulder.
Local Name
baladjdji mile belbmerrinj
Physical Description
Handbag, coiled, made by stitching two identical oval sides to a coiled oval section from which two long handles eminate on either side. The techniques used on the sides include crossed coiling and the handles are made of two single coils.
Significance
Marilyn Gumurdul's signature style includes the two sided pandanus handbags. She makes round ones and unsual oval shaped ones with close coiling like this handbag basket. Both types are known by the same name, baladjdji mile belbmerrinj. Other pandanus bags that she makes combine lace-like coiling or knotting with a close-coiled top. Marilyn is recognised as a very accomplished fibre artist, and her work was profiled in the exhibition, Woven Forms: Contemporary Basket Making in Australia that opened at Object Gallery in Sydney in September 2005 and then toured nationally. It has also featured in the publication '500 Baskets: Celebration of the Basketmakers Art' (2006).
More Information
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Object/Medium
Bag
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Maker
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Cultural Groups
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Locality
Gunbalanya, Western Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia
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Date Produced
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Collector
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Date Collected
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Fully Extended
400 mm (Length), 120 mm (Width), 470 mm (Height)
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Keywords
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Collection Names
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Type of item
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Discipline
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Category
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Collecting Areas
Australian Indigenous - Northern Australia and Queensland and Torres Strait Islands, Australian Indigenous Identity and Contemporary Life