Australian Esoteric Issue 6 | Page 20

recall in detail the brutality of these times. At Ruby Plains, south of Halls Creek, four Aboriginal men were slain and decapitated by the station owner and manager as a reprisal for butchering a bullock, and at Texas Downs a similar event occurred - several Aborigines were shot because they had killed some cattle. And at Bedford Downs, probably around 1924, Aborigines at the camp were given food rations poisoned with strychnine. A number of white station workers then shot and killed the Aborigines as they were writhing in agony from the effects of the poison. These massacres were undoubtedly driven by racial prejudice - the Aborigines had slain the cattle because they were destroying their traditional food sources and disrupting their relationship with the land. Rover Thomas recorded the sites of these massacres in a number of 'Killing Times' paintings. These works - mostly painted between 1988 and 1991 - are deeply moving and among his most impressive large-scale compositions. It is ironic, though, that works of such extraordinary beauty could arise from such tragedy. Thomas's paintings record the locations of the massacres and incorporate within their dot-delineations the sites where the Aborigines were slain and their bodies dismembered or burnt, where bullocks were butchered, and where wood was gathered. Tracks, roads and creeks - even the paths taken by the station owners - are also an intrinsic part of the design. What is truly extraordinary is that a timeless, universal quality arises in these works which seems to transcend the tragedies themselves : it is also a great tribute to the descendants of the victims that they are able to recall these grim events without moral outrage or vengefulness towards present-day white Australians. These were tragedies in the past, they say ; these were killings that happened 'in them days...' Rover Thomas continued to produce ochre paintings of exquisite beauty up until his death on 12 April 1998. With his passing Australia lost one of its greatest Aboriginal artists - perhaps the greatest of all time. Further images by Rover Thomas can be found on the Internet and in major publications on Australian Aboriginal art. * * * Shaman Journey In 1989 the author of the above article, Nevill Drury, collaborated with Australian musician Japetus to create Shaman Journey. This album has Nevill playing the repetitive, hypnotic drum rhythms of the shaman in order to help the listener enter an altered state and pursue an inner journey to contact their totem animal. In the second half of the recording the drum rhythm is complemented by additional rhythms and atmosphere by Japetus to create the feeling of a shamanic gathering. Shaman Journey You can find out more about Shaman Journey on the Japetus website.