Search

We Are A Proud Member of the Indigenous Art Code

Buy 9 Cards & Get The 10th Free! Checkout Code: 10for9cards

About your event or your specific corporate gift needs.

With a few decades of experience in the corporate world and a network of hundreds of Australian Made makers we can help you find the perfect gift!

Corporate Gifting Made Easy

Bits of Australia is a member of the Indigenous Art Code ensuring ethical standards are in place when we source Indigenous products and that we respect Indigenous cultural practices and Artists’ rights.

Sold out

Dreaming Three Circle Hoop Earrings - Murdie Morris

Australian Made

ETCHDMM33

Notify me when this product is available:

Gift Wrapping
Gifting Services

We love making your Australian gifts look extra special!

We have a few different options that you can choose from -

Any questions - just call us on 02 9056 4643 and we will be happy to help you! 

Beautiful Australian gifts!

These Aboriginal artwork earrings have been Made in Australia and will make a unique Australian gift for birthdays or special treat just for you.

In colourful summer colours of blue, pink, yellow, orange and black there are also many earrings in one. Slide your shapes on and off the hoops layer them however you please or wear each piece individually. 

The statement earrings have been made in Australia and show an element of the Aboriginal artwork titled Dreaming by Murdie Morris. Murdie is a painter with the Warlukurlangu Art Centre and these earrings have been made in collaboration with this Aboriginal owned art centre.

Product Details -

  • Features Aboriginal art by Murdie Morris
  • Sterling silver hoops (18mm in diameter)
  • Reversible silver alloy panels with artwork on one side and sleek brushed silver on the other
  • 4cm long  x 2.5cm wide
  • 2.66 grams each 
  • 100% Australian Made in Queensland

 

Murdie Nampijinpa Morris was born in the 1930s at Rabbit Flat, a tiny settlement in the middle of the Tanami Desert in the Northern Territory of Australia. Her parents would have taken her out bush in the Nyirripi area, showing her sites and teaching her the traditional ways of her country.

Murdie began her journey into painting when she attended a workshop in 2012. She enjoys painting her father’s Jukurrpa, Maliki Jukurrpa (Domestic Dog Dreaming) and Malikijarra Jukurrpa (Two Dog Dreaming) – Dreamings that have been passed down through generations and relate directly to the land, its features and the animals and plants that inhabit it. She uses an unrestricted palette to develop a modern interpretation of her traditional culture.