Wandjuk Djuakan Marika was born in 1927 (or 1930[1][2]) on Bremer Island (Dhambaliya) in the Northern Territory.[3] He was the eldest son of Mawalan 1 Marika and his wife Bamatja,[4][3] and the brother of Banduk Marika, Dhuwarrwarr Marika, Bayngul, and Laklak (all sisters).[2] He was a member of the Rirratjingu group of the Yolngu people.[3][4][1] During childhood, he travelled throughout Arnhem Land by foot and by canoe.[5] Through his parents, he learned to respect his country and inherited extensive rights to land through his father, who was a clan leader.[5] His father also taught him how to paint. Wandjuk talked extensively about his father's teaching: "I'm the top man's son. Because my father is the most important man... We are the sons who know how to make, where to go, where to find the place"[6]
Marika was educated and learned English at the Methodist Overseas Mission at Yirrkala, which was established in 1935.[3][7] By the age of 18, he had already been through extensive ceremonial training and had learned a large amount of knowledge about the land and culture.[6]
Career
His paintings expressed his people's traditional lore and spiritual beliefs, and included Djang'kawu Story (1960) and Birth of the Djang'kawu Children of Yelangbara (1982).[1]Djang'kawu is the founding ancestor of the Rirratjingu in traditional stories, who gave birth to the clan at Yalangbara.[4] He also painted the story of the Wawilak sisters. The expression of these stories was part of his responsibility as a clan leader, and the skills were passed on by his father, Mawalan 1.[1] Marika painted the Djang'kawu story for the Dhuwa side of the Yirrkala Church Panels in 1963. He painted the bottom right most portion of the panel, and his painting serves as the start of the panel. This was a very important painting because the Djung'kawu story is the creation story for the entire Dhuwa moiety.[8]
In a 1974 Marika was distressed to discover that an earlier painting, Sea life (Dreaming of the artist’s mother) (1959) had been turned into a tea towel. He discovered the reproduction in a store in Cairns (which had been manufactured in Holland) when on a trip there. He said at the time: “I was shocked when I walked into that shop, and when I saw it I was shocked and break my heart”.[9] This painting expresses elements of his mother's Warramirri clan Dreaming and he was so distressed by this incident that he stopped painting for years;[1] he said he lost his power to paint.[9] It was then that he realized that Aboriginal artists needed some form of protection.[10] In the Aboriginal News in 1976, Wandjuk wrote "It is not that we object to people reproducing our work, but it is essential that we be consulted first, for only we know if a particular painting is of special sacred significance, to be seen only by certain members of a tribe, and only we can give permission for our works of art to be reproduced."[10]
As he had been taught English at the mission school, he used his skills to assist anthropologists such as Charles Mountford and Ronald and Catherine Berndt to understand Yolngu culture.[1] He also used the skills of English to help translate the Bible into the Gumatj language. Furthermore, it allowed him to help with the creation of the Yirrkala Bark Petition in 1963.[7]
Once he became an established artist, Marika was recognised as a member of the Aboriginal Arts Advisory Committee of the Australian Council for the Arts between the years 1970 and 1973.[3] Immediately following that period, he co-founded the Aboriginal Arts Board in 1973, and became chairman in 1976,[11] a post he held until 1979.[1] Marika also had a directorial role at Aboriginal Arts and Crafts Pty Ltd, as well as belonging to the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies' advisory committee.[3]
He was the author of The Aboriginal Children's History of Australia.[13] Marika also wrote an autobiography with co-author Jennifer Isaacs entitled Wandjuk Marika: Life Story (1995). In this book, he intentionally did not include sacred information that could not be known by children, women, and balanda, understanding that this book was for a public audience and it was his responsibility to protect that sacred knowledge.[14] Marika died in 1987, prior to the book being published, and Isaacs waited the appropriate amount of time (as determined by his community) to publish his work in 1995.[15]
Activism
Marika wrote frequent but unsuccessful letters to the Australian federal government to protest against mining activities on Yolngu lands.[1] In August 1963 he helped to send the first of several bark petitions to the Commonwealth government protesting the decision to grant mining leases on the Gove Peninsula.[3] The Yirrkala bark petition was the first Indigenous document to be officially recognised and accepted by the Australian Parliament.[16][17]
Following the appropriation of his sacred clan designs on a line of Dutch tea towels, Marika became concerned with the intellectual and cultural property rights of Indigenous Australians. The reproduction of these designs disrespected the sacred knowledge of his people and were being sold primarily for their aesthetic value, rather than a cultural one.[18] Marika lobbied for the creation of the Aboriginal Artists th in 1973 to protect the copyright of Aboriginal artists and Indigenous intellectual property.[3][1] In an article about him, the Canberra Times wrote that he considered land rights to be the most important aboriginal cause and that he believed the ownership of sacred land remained a significant issue to Aboriginal people.[19]
His art is also featured in the Madayin exhibition which is on tour in the United States from 2022-2025 and encompasses eight decades of artistic production at Yirrkala, from 1935 to the present. His painting titled "The Birth of the Djan'kawu Children at Yalaŋbara" is represented in the exhibition.[25]
Personal life and death
His son Mawalan 2 Marika is also an artist,[26] and his daughter is Rarriwuy Marika. Wandjuk Marika was the uncle of Raymattja Marika.[20] He thought it was very important to instruct his children about their roles and responsibilities in a bicultural world.[27]
^ abcdefghijkWatson, Ken. "Wandjuk Marika". Art Gallery of NSW. Retrieved 17 August 2021. [Extract from] Ken Watson in Tradition today: Indigenous art in Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2014.
^ abcdefghIsaacs, Jennifer, "Marika, Wandjuk Djuakan (1927–1987)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 16 June 2018
^ abcMARIKA, Wandjuk, "Foreword", in ISAACS, Jennifer, Australian Dreaming: 40,000 Years of Aboriginal History, 1980, ISBN0-7254-0884-7, p.5
^ abIsaacs, Jennifer, "Wandjuk Djuakan Marika (1927–1987)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 22 April 2024
^Dettman, Carol (1999). Saltwater: Yirrkala Bark Paintings of Sea Country. Neutral Bay, New South Wales: Buku-Larrngay Mulka Centre in association with Jennifer Isaacs Publishing. ISBN9780646377025.