Ngarn Wa’ngal

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A01=Alisa Bunbury
A01=Sophie Gerhard
aboriginal art book
albert namatjira
art exhibition book
australian art book
australian art books
australian botanical art
australian culture book
australian history book
australian landscape art
Author_Alisa Bunbury
Author_Sophie Gerhard
botanical art australia
Category=PSTH
Category=WNP
coffee table book
contemporary australian art
cultural heritage
ecological art
ecology art
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eucalypt art
eucalyptus art
exhibition catalogue
first nations art
forthcoming
frederick mccubbin
gift book
gum tree art
gumtree art
indigenous art book
jazz money
joan ross
landscape art australia
margaret preston
may gibbs
melbourne art
ngarn wangal
potter museum
visual art monograph

Product details

  • ISBN 9780522882520
  • Dimensions: 205 x 265mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Melbourne University Press
  • Publication City/Country: AU
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Ngarn Wa'ngal: Art of the Gum Tree is a landmark publication dedicated to the eucalypt and the art it inspires. It traces the gum tree through art history and contemporary practice, engaging with Indigenous sovereignty, Australian identity, nationalism, climate change, land management and the tree's global impact.

Richly illustrated, the book features a range of contributors, from artists, Aboriginal Elders and art historians to ecologists, poets and writers who share their responses to this iconic Australian symbol, charting the gum tree's ever-evolving significance in art, culture, the environment and wider society.

The title Ngarn Wa'ngal translates as 'breathing for us' in Woi Wurrung language.

Alisa Bunbury is Senior Curator, Grimwade Collection at the University of Melbourne and has previously worked as a curator at the National Gallery of Victoria and Art Gallery of South Australia. She is a specialist in colonial art history who seeks to contribute to a deeper understanding of Australia's complex past.

Sophie Gerhard is a curator and researcher based in Naarm and Adjunct Curator at the University of Melbourne. Her curatorial interests include conversations surrounding national identity and colonialism, in particular the emotion of shame and its role within Australian and First Nations art.

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