Unlikely weapons have enabled a group of Martu artists to create a powerful and plaintive appeal for the protection of their Country from the threat of uranium mining. Craig McKeough reports.
![Kintyre artists - Robina Clause (left), Judith Anya Samson, and Corban Clause Williams at Martumili Artists, 2021. Photograph by Claire Martin Three women sit on the Kintyre painting as they work on it Facing off mining giants with art](https://www.seesawmag.com.au/wp-content/uploads/fly-images/46961/Kintyre-artists-Robina-Clause-left-Judith-Anya-Samson-and-Corban-Clause-Williams-at-Martumili-Artists-2021.-Photograph-by-Claire-Martin-410x273-c.jpg)
Western Australia’s arts playground
Western Australia’s arts playground
17 August 2022
Unlikely weapons have enabled a group of Martu artists to create a powerful and plaintive appeal for the protection of their Country from the threat of uranium mining. Craig McKeough reports.
19 November 2020
The Lester Prize’s 2020 exhibition enchants with its mix of accessibility, inclusivity and celebration of community identity, says Jaimi Wright.