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Kimberley's Warmun Art Centre in WA reopens after COVID pandemic closure

Artists and their families gather outside the studio to celebrate the reopening of Warmun Art Centre. (Supplied: Warmun Arts Centre)

A world-renowned art gallery in a small Kimberley community has reopened to the public after a prolonged closure due to the pandemic.

Warmun Arts Centre was closed for two years and two months after Aboriginal communities in Western Australia were placed into mandated closure to non-residents.

While access was still restricted to Indigenous communities, Warmun's acclaimed art centre was on the outskirts of the community, on a riverbank opposite residents, and would operate under strict COVID protocols.

"It's exciting," art centre manager Melissa Callanan said of the May 16 reopening.

The gallery used the two years of closure to reinvigorate its interior, repainting walls, improving curation skills of locals and showing works through new virtual software.

Artists painted from home, with supplies of canvas, brushes and paints dropped off in bundles.

Artist Shirley Purdie at work. (Supplied: Warmun Art Centre)

Like many remote art centres, it also boosted online sales during the pandemic.

"We've done well in the closure time, we've actually done incredibly well. We've maintained our sales," Ms Callanan said.

Gabriel Nodea with one of his paintings. (Supplied: Warmun Art Centre)

Surprisingly the strong demand from galleries for the centre's more expensive works by Elders and senior artists, which are not usually sold through online methods, also held up.

"Our Elders are extremely well recognised nationally and internationally," Ms Callanan said.

"People like Shirley Purdie, she had a major acquisition through the Museum of Contemporary Art and was showing there last year and she had a sell-out exhibition in Sydney.

"And of course, we have Mabel Juli, who we call our rock star and we have constant requests for commissions of her very famous Moon and Star which is at the Museum of Contemporary Art and also held by the National Gallery of Australia."

Artist Mabel Juli, left, paints at home during the lockdown while her granddaughter Atlanta, right, also paints traditional stories. (Supplied: Warmun Art Centre)

Ms Callanan said the gallery, owned by the Gija people, had worked hard to maintain profits returning to the community, because external galleries would deduct commissions.

"Last year we thought we have to start to work harder to make more direct sales, because that's better for the community members and better for artists," she said.

"A lot of the major art fairs went online last year. That means those sales come to us directly."

Warmun Art Centre chairwoman Eileen Bray holds one of her bottle tree ochre paintings. (Supplied: Warmun Art Centre)

Warmun's artists have strong connections to their heritage and country, and have overcome adversity, including when the gallery was rebuilt after floods ripped through in March 2011. 

The board was keen to welcome visitors back but visitors must follow COVID-19 prevention guidelines, including taking a rapid test, which will be provided free of charge.

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