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Churchill Cann (c.1944-2016)

Warmun Art
“My old people used to tell me to paint. But I’d stop. Nah. Too hard.” “Keep going – you’ll find your liyan (that good feeling in the guts),” they’d say. “But when you start – you gotta finish…In this work, here (now), I found my liyan.”
– Churchill Cann, Warmun Art Centre, 2012

Churchill Cann (1944 – 2016) painted for many years, influenced by the first generation of artists that established the Warmun contemporary art movement. His precise textures, lucid compositions of country, haunting mystery and the gravity of marginalized histories are marks of confidence and surety.

Mr. Cann worked as a stockman from an early age on Texas Downs cattle station, which lies to the east of Warmun. He moved around his own country and also worked at Alice Downs, Mabel Downs Spring Creek and Lissadell stations. Riding in the bush was a way of being in the country and absorbing knowledge from his elders while working in a white man’s world caring for cattle. Mr. Cann was knowledgeable about traditional healing practices, expertise he inherited from his father. These life experiences informed his work: “I’m doing them hill where we bin travelling. I’m thinking about what them hills really look like. I just follow them hills where I bin walk.”

In a 2012 interview, Mr. Cann was asked how he first started painting. His initial response led him to childhood, when he’d watch his uncle and grandfather make things. Of his uncle, Cann said, ‘Whatever broke, he’d renew ‘em.’ The act of painting is akin to the act (and memory) of making things – of heating horse shoes over a fire, bashing them into shape with a rock, working with sugarbag wax, straightening bamboo spears and preparing kangaroo sinew.

Mr. Cann was a very serious and focused practitioner at work, yet his character is playful to the bone. He entitled a 2013 solo show at William Mora Galleries Joolany Wariwoony – Cheeky Dog. This name is based on his Dreaming the Jarrinyin; a kind of devil dog described by Mr. Cann as having ‘a long neck like a giraffe’. He was the winner of the 2013 WA Indigenous Artist Award at the Art Gallery of Western Australia.

An extended version of this text appears as an essay by Alana Hunt in the catalogue of the 2013 Western Australian Indigenous Art Awards.
Revolver Springs
Churchill Cann (c.1944-2016)

98 x 139 cm (framed)

$5500

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