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Freddy Purla
Freddie Purla was born in 1968 in Darwin. The son of talented artist Barbara Weir, and grandson of the late Minnie Pwerle, Freddie Purla began painting in 1989 at Alice Springs. He was also the adopted nephew of the famous Emily Kame Kngwarreye. His work has sold to many collections in Germany, Amsterdam, Paris, Switzerland and New York.
Purla regularly visited Utopia with his family as a very young child, often staying for long periods before travelling to Alice springs or Adelaide. One of his first vivid memories as a child was of the strange looking creature, the Scorpion.
The Scorpion Dreaming has been passed down to Freddie by his grandmother’s family. As it’s sting is often very painful, the scorpion is left undisturbed and respected at all times. It is rarely seen during the day and only the desert sands display the signs of the scorpion’s track.
Purla’s paintings represent the courtship dance between the male and female scorpion. Each scorpion interlock their pincers together while traveling back and forth in what can only be described as a dance. After several hours and as much as 24 hours, the tracks that are left behind create an artwork in itself on the ground. The tracks which are criss-crossed over and over again are rare to find in the desert. Freddie’s paintings powerfully represent the energy and vigour of the many movements made by the scorpions in their ritual desert dance.
EXHIBTIONS
1998 Quadrivium Gallery, Sydney.
1999 Quadrivium Gallery,Sydney.
2000 Major exhibition of Dacou artists, sponsored by AMP.
2002 Fireworks Gallery, Brisbane.
2003 Telstra Award Nomination.
2003 Tandanya Institute, Adelaide.
2004 Utopia Dreams, Dacou Gallery, Adelaide.
2005 Solander Gallery, Canberra.
2006 Gallery Savah, Sydney.
2007 Gallery Savah, Sydney.
2008 Flinders Lane Gallery, Melbourne.
2008 Gallery Mbantua, Alice Springs.