Beasts of Legend

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Regional Traditions and Peoples

Western and Central Desert: Pintupi and Arrernte

Estimated reading: 6 minutes 57 views Contributors

The Western and Central Desert region holds some of the most influential sources of Aboriginal law, story, and visual culture. This overview focuses on two peoples whose countries meet across vast dune fields, stone ranges, and salt pans: the Pintupi of the Western Desert and the Arrernte of Central Australia. While each community maintains distinct languages, sites, and custodial responsibilities, both ground their worlds in ancestral law—Tjukurrpa for Pintupi and Altyerrenge (often shortened to Altyerre) for Arrernte—linking place, kinship, ceremony, and survival in arid landscapes.

Country and Language

Pintupi country spans the far western reaches of the Northern Territory and eastern Western Australia, in and around the Gibson, Great Sandy, and Great Victoria deserts. Settlement names like Kintore and Kiwirrkurra mark contemporary communities; beneath and beyond these are networks of rock holes, claypans, and dunes embedded with story.

Arrernte country centers on Mparntwe (Alice Springs) and the MacDonnell Ranges, with closely related Central, Eastern, and Western Arrernte language varieties. Gaps, ranges, and ephemeral creeks frame a dense concentration of story places that bind local estates and kin groups to ongoing obligations.

  • Language families: Pintupi is part of the Western Desert language continuum; Arrernte languages form a distinct Central Australian group.
  • Country is inseparable from identity and law; place names carry genealogies, routes, and rights.
  • Mobility across desert routes historically followed soakages, food resources, and ceremonial networks.

Cosmology and Law: Tjukurrpa and Altyerrenge

Tjukurrpa (Pintupi) and Altyerrenge (Arrernte) are not “myths” in a casual sense; they are cosmological law. They describe how ancestor beings shaped the land, instituted kin categories, set rules for resource use, and established ceremonies. These laws are enacted through songlines—tracks that traverse the continent linking story episodes to specific topographic features.

  • Time: The Dreaming is both ancient and current; it persists in place and practice.
  • Law: Social conduct, marriage rules, and rights to country are encoded in story cycles.
  • Transmission: Knowledge is tiered; some content is public, while deeper levels are restricted by age, gender, and initiation status.

Pintupi Tingari Networks

Among Pintupi and neighboring Western Desert peoples, the Tingari are powerful ancestor figures who journeyed across the desert creating dunes, rock holes, and ceremonial grounds. The Tingari cycle is central to law and instruction for initiates, detailing routes, songs, and designs that encode geography and ethics. Public retellings emphasize the educational and geographic aspects; restricted sections contain esoteric teachings reserved for initiated custodians.

Western Desert iconography translates Tingari routes into an abstract cartography widely recognized in contemporary painting. Concentric circles can indicate water sources or camps; connecting lines track movement; recurring motifs refer to foods, winds, and ceremonial objects. Read correctly, these works are mnemonics that preserve map-knowledge while respecting cultural protocols by omitting restricted details.

  • Key motifs commonly seen in Tingari-related art:
    • Concentric circles: camps, rock holes, or soakages
    • Parallel lines: dune corridors, wind, or traveling paths
    • U-shapes: seated people; small strokes: footprints or seeds
  • Functions:
    • Teach navigation across sparse water points
    • Reinforce law during ceremonial gatherings
    • Maintain inter-community coordination along shared storylines

Arrernte Ancestors and Story Places

Arrernte Altyerrenge includes numerous ancestor beings whose actions formed the landscape and instituted social order. A well-known complex centers on caterpillar ancestors—Yeperenye, Ntyarlke, and Utnerrengatye—whose travels and conflicts created the ranges and gaps around Mparntwe. These beings anchor ceremonial responsibility for sites and songs, connecting kin groups to specific tracts of country.

Another prominent story concerns Tnorala (Gosse Bluff), where a celestial infant in a wooden carrier fell to earth, forming the ring-shaped mountain. This account aligns sky and ground in a single law sequence, demonstrating how Arrernte cosmology integrates astronomical phenomena with earthly features and ceremonial authority.

  • Story-places often align with:
    • Gaps and gorges used as passageways and ritual grounds
    • Springs and ephemeral creeks that require careful governance
    • Rock formations read as bodily traces of ancestors
  • Knowledge domains:
    • Public narratives for teaching country etiquette
    • Restricted songs, designs, and objects for initiated custodians

Water, Survival, and Ancestral Sovereignty

Desert peoples maintain precise hydrological knowledge: soakages hidden beneath dunes, rock holes that recharge after rare rains, and claypans that hold shallow water. In both Pintupi and Arrernte law, ancestor beings regulate access to these resources. Water places carry strict behavioral codes—silence, offerings, avoidance of pollution—because water is a living relation and a locus of power.

Many desert storylines also connect to water-sovereign beings, often glossed broadly as “rainbow serpent” figures in pan-Australian discussion but articulated locally with specific names, sites, and rules. Such beings are understood as custodians who can reward observance or punish transgression, linking daily survival to ethical practice.

Ceremony, Art, and Transmission

The Western Desert art movement, catalyzed in the 1970s and sustained by Pintupi and neighboring artists, brought Tjukurrpa cartographies to a global audience while navigating protocols that protect restricted knowledge. Paintings function as teaching aids, legal documents of connection, and economic instruments that support community-controlled enterprises.

Arrernte cultural transmission includes sand storytelling, song, and performance at story-places, with body designs and objects used according to kin-based rights. In both traditions, ceremony reactivates country: singing tracks, renewing sites, and acknowledging ancestors’ continued presence. The result is a living archive—distributed across the land, bodies, and artworks—that sustains law and identity.

  • Transmission pathways:
    • Kin-based instruction from elders to younger generations
    • Seasonal gatherings for ceremony and site maintenance
    • Contemporary schools and ranger programs guided by custodians
  • Safeguards:
    • Layered designs masking restricted elements
    • Permissions managed by senior law holders

Sky Knowledge and Orientation

Desert night skies serve as calendars and maps. The Emu in the Sky—outlined by dark dust lanes across the Milky Way—signals seasonal behaviors of animals and plant foods. Arrernte narratives link celestial events to places like Tnorala, while Pintupi travel and ceremony likewise integrate stellar cues into journey timing and orientation.

Such astronomical knowledge is not separate from law; it affirms the continuity between above and below. Stories of stars and dust lanes guide when to burn country, where to find resources, and how to synchronize inter-community visits along songlines.

Protocols and Contemporary Context

Cultural protocols govern who may speak for which places, what can be shown publicly, and how stories may be reproduced. This documentation respects those limits by discussing public aspects of Tjukurrpa and Altyerrenge and avoiding restricted material. Any deeper engagement requires direct permission from relevant custodians.

  • Good practice for researchers and visitors:
    • Consult local cultural authorities before visiting sites or publishing material
    • Follow signage and community guidance on photography and access
    • Support Indigenous-led art centers and ranger programs
  • Contemporary strengths:
    • Vigorous painting traditions mapping country and law
    • Language maintenance and revival initiatives
    • On-country education linking youth to songlines and sites

The Western and Central Desert—through Pintupi and Arrernte custodianship—demonstrates how law, geography, and kinship remain tightly braided. Tjukurrpa and Altyerrenge are not only archives of the past but frameworks for sustainable futures, guiding resource care, social order, and creative flourishing in the world’s great desert heart.

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CONTENTS

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