• About
  • Contact
  • Favourites
All ArtworkPremium ArtworkCollectionsArtistsArt CentresAbout
Contact
Favourites
Tunbridge Gallery acknowledges the Whadjuk and Wardandi Noongar, traditional owners of the land where we are located. We recognise their strong culture and connection to country and pay our respects to their Elders, past and present.
Cottesloe
Shop 6 Napoleon Close
12 – 18 Napoleon Street
Western Australia 6011
10am to 3pm
Thursday to Saturday
(+61 8) 9284 2800Get directions
Margaret River
Shop 1
139 – 141 Bussell Highway
Western Australia 6285
10am to 4pm
Thu, Fri, Sat, Mon
10am to 3pm
Sunday
(+61 8) 9758 7870Get directions
All artworksPremium artworksCollectionsArtists
AboutContactPrivacy policy
Instagram (Margaret River)Instagram (Cottesloe)
© 2026 Tunbridge GalleryMade by Websmith
  • About
  • Contact
  • Favourites
All ArtworkPremium ArtworkCollectionsArtistsArt CentresAbout
Contact
Favourites

Shorty Jangala Robertson (c1930-2014)

Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation
Shorty Jangala Robertson was born at Jila (Chilla Well), a large soakage and claypan north west of Yuendumu, a remote Aboriginal community located 290 kms north-west of Alice Springs in the NT of Australia. He lived a nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle with his parents, older brother and extended Warlpiri family. They travelled vast distances across desert country, passing through Warlukurlangu, south west of Jila and Ngarlikurlangu, north of Yuendumu, visiting Jangala’s, his skin brothers. His childhood memories consist of stories associated with the Coniston massacre of Aboriginal people. Families were also shot at Wantaparri, close to Jila. Shorty Jangala Robertson had virtually no contact with white fellas during his youth but remembered leaving Jila for Mt Theo ‘to hide’ from being shot. His father died at Mt Theo. He moved with his mother to Mt Doreen Station, and subsequently the new settlement of Yuendumu. During World War II, the army took people from Yuendumu to the other Warlpiri settlement at Lajamanu. Shorty was taken and separated from his mother; however, she came to get him on foot and together they travelled hundreds of miles back to Chilla Well. Drought food and medical supplies forced Shorty and his family back to Yuendumu from time to time. His working life was full of adventure and hard work for different enterprises in the Alice Springs and Yuendumu areas. He finally settled at Yuendumu in 1967 after the Australian Citizen Referendum. It is extraordinary in all his travels and jobs over his whole working life, that he escaped the burgeoning and flourishing Central Desert art movement of the 1970’s and 1980’s. Thus Shorty’s paintings are fresh, vigorous and new. His use of colour to paint and interpret his dreamings of Ngapa (Water), Watiyawarnu (Acacia), Yankirri (Emu) and Pamapardu (Flying Ant) is vital, yet upholding the Warlpiri tradition. Shorty was well in his 70’s when he started painting. He was an active member of the Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Association, an Aboriginal owned and governed art centre located in Yuendumu. His first solo exhibition at Alcaston Gallery in 2003 was met with great artistic acclaim. Since then he exhibited in Aboriginal Art Exhibitions in Australia and overseas.

He passed away 28-09-2014 on a sunny Sunday morning.
Ngapa Jukurrpa - Water Dreaming
Shorty Jangala Robertson (c1930-2014)

152 x 76 cm

$8000

Browse All Artists