Mr Patterns
Working closely with Papunya artists, Geoffrey Bardon helped start one of Australia’s most recognisable art forms, the Western Desert art movement.
The Papunya Tula (Western Desert) art movement began in 1971 when a Sydney schoolteacher, Geoffrey Bardon, encouraged some of the local First Nations men to paint a mural on a blank school wall. Bardon had been posted as an art teacher to the government settlement at Papunya, 240km north-west of Alice Springs. He suggested the artists paint traditional designs using western materials and, in defiance of white authorities, urged them to value their work commercially as well as spiritually. In 1972, the artists successfully established their own company, which to this day is entirely owned and directed by traditional Aboriginal people from the Western Desert.
A Film Australia National Interest Program in association with Reel World Productions. Developed with the assistance of the Australian Film Commission and the NSW Film and Television Office. Developed and produced with the assistance of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
© National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.