Spiritual Archaeology
Spiritual Art
DreamArt & Wanjina
 Competition
SongLines
Truth in Art Fundraiser
Truth in Art News & Links
Croatian Chronicles
Wanjinas World Warning
SkyGod Speaks -
 Forgiveness Day

Among the Hostiles
Home
Excerpts from Vesna's book:
 Dreamtime Set in Stone
 Goomblar talks

About us
Blue Mountains
DreamRaiser Artists
Benedikt Osvath
Hall of Wanjinas
Gina Sinozich
Vesna the Writer
Goomblar the Musician
Contact

About the Artist

Gina Sinozich

A naive-art painter that has astonished the world is the way Gina is usually introduced. This self-taught prolific painter, now 79, started painting when she was 70 and in a few years achieved worldwide recognition.

Her artwork is now on permanent display in the National Gallery of Australia, the Liverpool Museum, the Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre and the Maritime Museum, and her works are also featured in numerous private collections in Australia, New Zealand, USA and Europe.

Gina's works are now displayed for the first time in the Blue Mountains at ModroGorje Gallery in Katoomba.

Gina's work has been highly praised by a number of experts for many different reasons, but the title of this exhibition, Genuine Gina, is very fitting, defining her art well – her powerful works are so bold, direct and honest, just as Gina herself, reflecting her extraordinary sensibility and the depth of her intuitive insight.


Artist’s Statement

Time to speak out

I paint Wanjinas because that’s the central part of Aboriginal spirituality. If someone said I should stick to my own tradition, I’d tell them it’s all the same. Spirituality is one, God is one – call him what you will. There is the same wisdom in all of the world’s traditions.

What I know about the Aboriginal people really upsets me. Watching documentaries and seeing what poverty their remote communities live in, it’s horrible. Then I see their cave paintings and rock carvings and I get inspired.

Whatever I read and learn about them prompts a response, an artistic one.

I know what I’m doing and I know it is right. I know their Wanjinas have no mouth, but I paint most of my Wanjinas with a mouth, sometimes with a smile. I give them mouths, because they need to speak. They’ve been mute for too long. They say it’s time to speak out.

Gina Sinozich