Ningura Napurrula
Born around 1938 at Watulka, south of the modern Kiwirrkura community, Ningura Napurrrula moved to Papunya in the early days of the settlement with her husband, who is now deceased.
In 1996 she was part of a group of elderly women from Kintore and Kiwirrkura who began painting for Papunya Tula Artists in their own right. Characteristic of her work is a strong dynamism and rich linear design-compositions created with heavy layers of acrylic paint. Her depictions include the story for Wirrulnga, a rockhole east of Kiwirrkurra.
She participated in an initial Papunya Tula Artists exhibition in 1996 and featured in several group shows in Sydney, Melbourne and Darwin in 1999. She had her first solo exhibition with William Mora Aboriginal Art in 2000, and participated in the impressive Kintore Women's Painting for the Papunya Tula retrospective at the Art Gallery of NSW.
Her talent was further recognised with a site-specific commission for the ceiling of the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, and her artwork featured on Australian postage stamps in 2003. She was also named one of the 50 Most Collectable artists by Australian Art Collector Magazine in 2007 and 2008.