Oven Mitt and Pot Holder Set Aboriginal Design - Hunter & Gather Rain forest - Colin Jones

Bunabiri
Oven Mitt and Pot Holder Set Aboriginal Design - Hunter & Gather Rain forest - Colin Jones

Hunter & Gathers Rainforest
by - Colin Jones

Features: Oven Mitt and Pot Holder

  • One Right Hand Oven Mitt
  • One Pot Holder
  • Hand Or Machine Washable
  • Warm iron only
  • 100% Cotton
  • Unique Indigenous designs designed in Australia by Indigenous Artists
  • Dimensions- 21cm (L) X 18cm (W) X 30cm (H)
  • Weight- 5g

Ovenmitt / Potholders suitable up to oven heat 200 degrees Celsius.

Not suitable for Pizza Ovens or Commercial Ovens using higher heat temperatures.

Hunters and Gatherers Rainforest
Aboriginal people have a profound spiritual connection to their land and the rainforest. The circles in the reproduction of the traditional painting Hunters and Gatherers Rainforest represent the life forces of the rainforest and the colours of the circles symbolise the vivid colours of the rainforest. Aboriginals lived in small family groups and were a hunter-gatherer people who adapted well to the rainforest. The aboriginal woman is carrying a Coolamon or wooden bowl on her head to hold food including vegetables, fruit, eggs and honey collected from the rainforest. The women owned and had special responsibilities towards sacred sites in the landscape, associated with song, cycles and Dreaming stories. They also had control of the secret ceremonies of reproduction, and as child bearers and childrearers they were highly valued. The Coolamon could also be filled with sand and an aboriginal woman was then able to carry her baby safely on her hip.

ARTIST INFORMATION
Colin Jones was born in 1947 in Queensland Australia, and is of Kaladoon and Nunuckle tribal descent. As a young boy, Colin learned to paint from his grandfather. Colins multi-layered dot paintings tell the stories of his ancestral lands, where the rain forest, rivers and land connect. In these depictions, there are small foot and hand prints telling the stories of Aboriginal people roaming the land.