'Kun-Kirh (Mud Ripples / Mud Ripple)'
Fabric design by Elizabeth Kandabuma
Table lamp H30 x ø15 cm in silk
Fabric: Art screen printing on dark beige silk, hand-printed with eco-friendly inks by the female artists of 'Bàbbarra Women's Centre' in Maningrida (Arnhem Land-Australia)
Opalescent polyphane lining
White metal structure
Integrated electrical system, cord with switch
Recommended bulb: 40w (not included)
Entirely handmade in a Parisian workshop
Meaning of fabric design
These patterns evoke the rippling movements of freshwater mud that emerge after heavy monsoon rains on the floodplains of Djinkarr and Nangak.
These ripples form on the Earth's surface in delicate, repetitive and changing patterns. These mud ripples move, crack, disappear and reappear in response to changing winds, rains and new appearances of the sun.
The ripples depicted in this composition belong to Elizabeth's native land, the floodplains of Djinkarr and Nangak south of Maningrida in Arnhem Land.
This design depicts the patterns of the freshwater mud ripples, which emerge after strong monsoonal wet seasons on the Djinkarr and Nangak flood plains.
These ripples form on the earth's surface in delicate repetitive and shifting patterns. The mud ripples move, crack, disappear and re-emerge in response to the changing wind, rains and new sun.
The mud ripples depicted in this design are on Elizabeth's homeland, the Djinkarr and Nangak floodplains south of Maningrida in Arnhem Land.
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