Roseanne Morton Pwerle
Lucky Morton Kngwarreye Ngwarai (born c. 1950) is an Anmatyerre woman from the celebrated Utopia region, located north-east of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory. Utopia is one of Australia’s most influential artistic communities and home to many of the nation’s most highly regarded Aboriginal artists, including the late Emily Kame Kngwarreye. As a member of this distinguished artistic lineage, Lucky has established herself as an innovative and highly accomplished contemporary painter.
Lucky spent her early childhood at Hatcher’s Creek, attending a bush school before later completing her schooling at Bachelor College in Alice Springs and furthering her education in Darwin. She grew up between the Country of MacDonnell Downs Station and the Kurrajong Camp, experiences that deeply shaped her cultural worldview and artistic expression.
Like many Utopia artists, Lucky began her artistic journey in the late 1970s as part of the batik movement, transitioning to acrylic painting around 1977. Her early works were characterised by bright, uplifting colours depicting women’s ceremonial body paint designs, desert flowers (Alpeyt), Tharrkarr (honey grevillea), and the Honey Ant Dreaming (Yerramp). Over time, she developed a highly recognisable style informed by her deep cultural knowledge and connection to Country.
Lucky often refers to painting “Two Countries,” representing the regions significant to her upbringing and identity—Ngkwarlerlanem and Arnkawenyerr. Her more recent paintings show a refined and sophisticated direction, featuring delicate layers, subtle colour fields, and intricate patterning. Many of these works draw inspiration from the Rainbow Dreaming (Boor-la-da), resulting in compositions that are both culturally rich and visually captivating.
Lucky’s artistic career spans decades and includes an impressive list of exhibitions both nationally and internationally. Her work has been shown alongside the most influential Utopia artists, including her mother, the renowned painter Mary Morton Kemarre. Her paintings are held in major institutional collections across Australia, affirming her place as an important contributor to the Utopia art movement.
1989• Utopia Women’s Paintings: The First Works on Canvas, SH Ervin Gallery, Sydney1989–1991• Utopia – A Picture Story, Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, Adelaide; Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin; Limerick City Gallery of Art, Limerick1990• Balance 1990: Views, Visions, Influences, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane1991• 8th National Aboriginal Art Award, Museum & Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin• Australian Perspective, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney1998• Paintings from Utopia and Balgo Hills, Aboriginal Art Galerie Bähr, Speyer, Germany1999• International Tour, ArtDirectGallery.com, Litsey & Kearney2005• Artists of Utopia: Then and Now, Outback Alive, Canberra2006• Desert Hues, The Gallery, Canberra
• National Gallery of Australia, Canberra• Powerhouse Museum, Sydney• Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane• Robert Holmes à Court Collection, Perth
My Country Dreaming is Lucky Morton Kngwarreye Ngwarai’s profound visual tribute to the Country that shaped her identity, culture, and ancestral responsibilities. In Anmatyerre culture, “Country” is not merely land—it embodies language, law, ceremony, kinship, songlines, and the spiritual presence of the ancestors who created the landscape during the Dreaming (Altyerr).
Through intricate dot work, flowing linework, and layered colour fields, Lucky depicts the features, stories, and sacred sites of her homelands. The painting maps the two regions most central to her life—Ngkwarlerlanem and Arnkawenyerr—places tied to her family, her Dreamings, and her cultural inheritance.
My Country Dreaming is not a literal map but a cultural narrative—a spiritual interpretation of place, memory, and belonging. Each mark reflects ancestral knowledge passed down through generations, making Lucky’s paintings both visually stunning and culturally profound.
Collectors value this series for its authenticity, depth, and the way Lucky balances traditional storytelling with a distinctly contemporary aesthetic.