Vogue Australia

Self-portrait

Vincent Namatjira takes three sugars with his coffee. “What?” he grins. “I like it sweet!” He says this less like a confession and more like a fact, with a frankness that makes me wonder if we should all be glutting our flat whites with sugar, caffeine snobs be damned.

It’s 9.30 in the morning, and we’re standing by the entrance of Yavuz Gallery in Sydney’s Surry Hills, which represents Namatjira internationally. Yavuz’s program director, Alanna Irwin, welcomes us in, and speaks briefly about the current exhibition, Abdul Abdullah’s Magical Thinking, which flanks us on all sides. Namatjira regards Abdullah’s paintings with the concentration of a fanatic - tipped ever so slightly forward, both hands clasped behind his back, curious eyes half-shielded by the black brim of his Panama hat. Anyone wandering into the gallery would pick the Western Arrernte man as an artist from his posture alone.

This month, the 40-year-old’s work - along with that of his great-grandfather, famed Western Aranda watercolourist Albert Namatjira -, presented as part of the Art Gallery of South Australia’s (AGSA) Tarnanthi Festival. The showcase is comprised of vibrant paintings that have established Namatjira as one of the country’s greatest portraitists, from sardonic depictions of politicians and colonial figureheads on Country - (2011), (2016), (2020) - to self-portraits and paintings of Indigenous changemakers including Eddie Mabo, Archie Roach and Gordon Bennett. (2020), portraying himself alongside AFL player Adam Goodes, won Namatjira the Art Gallery of New South Wales’s Archibald Prize in 2020. He was the first Indigenous artist to do so.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Vogue Australia

Vogue Australia1 min read
Seeing Shapes
WORDS: JONAH WATERHOUSE COLLAGE: ARQUETTE COOKE PHOTOGRAPHS: GETTY IMAGES, GORUNWAY.COM ■
Vogue Australia3 min read
Walk This Way
Sydney cobbler Julia Baldini’s shoes won’t play second fiddle to any outfit. Instead, she wants them to have a presence: stomping, fierce, theatrical. Take her newest pieces – knee-high, trimmed with a ballooning leather ruff, or shaggy blood-red Mon
Vogue Australia4 min read
Dream House
There’s a noticeable sense of calm that Stuart Vevers radiates, even over Zoom. The British designer – who’s served as creative director of American leather brand Coach for 10 years after stints at Loewe and Bottega Veneta – is conducting this interv

Related