Maureen Douglas Australian, Pitjantjara, b. 1966
Kungkarrangkalpa (Seven Sisters) - Kuru Ala, 2025
acrylic on canvas
92 x 122 cm
334-25
Kuru Ala is a important women’s sites associated with the Kungkarrangkalpa (Seven Sisters) Tjukurrpa (Dreaming / story) across the Western and Central Deserts. Located south, west of Papulankutja (Blackstone), the...
Kuru Ala is a important women’s sites associated with the Kungkarrangkalpa (Seven Sisters) Tjukurrpa (Dreaming /
story) across the Western and Central Deserts. Located south, west of Papulankutja (Blackstone), the site holds deep
cultural, spiritual, and ceremonial significance for women in the Ngaanyatjarra Lands.
In the sky, Wa Nyiru is associated with Orion’s Belt, while the sisters become the star cluster known widely as the
Pleiades. Many desert families still track these stars seasonally, tying sky and Country together in the story.
This place marks a key moment in the Seven Sisters story, where the sisters rested, gathered strength, and cared for
one another while escaping the persistent pursuit of Wa Nyiru. The surrounding caves, rock formations, and ground
features are recognised as physical evidence of the ancestral events that took place here during the Tjukurrpa.
Across many desert communities, the Seven Sisters Tjukurrpa follows the travels of the sisters as they move through
Country, constantly evading Nyiru, who uses magic to disguise himself in many forms — bush foods, trees, and even
animals — in an attempt to catch them. At Kuru Ala, the sisters stop to protect and heal the eldest sister before
continuing their journey eastward.
Today, Kuru Ala remains an active cultural site, cared for and visited by women with es to this Country. The story is still
taught, sung, and remembered. The paintings created by artists of Papulankutja and Mantamaru reflect both the
ancestral narrative and the living landscape, mapping the caves, water sources, and pathways the sisters travelled.
story) across the Western and Central Deserts. Located south, west of Papulankutja (Blackstone), the site holds deep
cultural, spiritual, and ceremonial significance for women in the Ngaanyatjarra Lands.
In the sky, Wa Nyiru is associated with Orion’s Belt, while the sisters become the star cluster known widely as the
Pleiades. Many desert families still track these stars seasonally, tying sky and Country together in the story.
This place marks a key moment in the Seven Sisters story, where the sisters rested, gathered strength, and cared for
one another while escaping the persistent pursuit of Wa Nyiru. The surrounding caves, rock formations, and ground
features are recognised as physical evidence of the ancestral events that took place here during the Tjukurrpa.
Across many desert communities, the Seven Sisters Tjukurrpa follows the travels of the sisters as they move through
Country, constantly evading Nyiru, who uses magic to disguise himself in many forms — bush foods, trees, and even
animals — in an attempt to catch them. At Kuru Ala, the sisters stop to protect and heal the eldest sister before
continuing their journey eastward.
Today, Kuru Ala remains an active cultural site, cared for and visited by women with es to this Country. The story is still
taught, sung, and remembered. The paintings created by artists of Papulankutja and Mantamaru reflect both the
ancestral narrative and the living landscape, mapping the caves, water sources, and pathways the sisters travelled.