🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print 120x160cm Oak Box Frame

Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6

Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print 120x160cm Oak Box Frame

ARTIST: Amanda Hinkelmann
Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print - Sharp and methodical, this labyrinthine contemporary Indigenous Aboriginal piece features ladder like structures weaving and overlapping one another, representative of the earth's cracks and crevices after a drought. Artist Amanda Hinkelmann has used this piece to create a visual metaphor for reluctanct acceptance of support after neglect. The colour palette is cool and muted, featuring dark, murky blue and navy tones highlighted with soft pink, beige and burgundy accents.

After a long drought the ground, as desperate as it is for water, forebodes its penetration, although it is such a vital life source, due to its absence when it was needed most.

120x160cm Oak Box Frame
Canvas Art Print.

$174.85

Original: $499.58

-65%
Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print 120x160cm Oak Box Frame—

$499.58

$174.85

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

ARTIST: Amanda Hinkelmann
Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print - Sharp and methodical, this labyrinthine contemporary Indigenous Aboriginal piece features ladder like structures weaving and overlapping one another, representative of the earth's cracks and crevices after a drought. Artist Amanda Hinkelmann has used this piece to create a visual metaphor for reluctanct acceptance of support after neglect. The colour palette is cool and muted, featuring dark, murky blue and navy tones highlighted with soft pink, beige and burgundy accents.

After a long drought the ground, as desperate as it is for water, forebodes its penetration, although it is such a vital life source, due to its absence when it was needed most.

120x160cm Oak Box Frame
Canvas Art Print.

Dhala-bu-nya Bula Blue Canvas Art Print 120x160cm Oak Box Frame | Few and Far