Tanya Bird Mbitjana
Utopia, Northern Territory
Artwork DetailsSize: 106 x 44 cmMedium: Acrylic on CanvasCommissions: Available on Request
Tanya Bird Mbitjana (Mpetyane) is a highly regarded Indigenous artist from the renowned Utopia region, located approximately 250 kilometres northeast of Alice Springs. Utopia is internationally celebrated for producing some of Australia’s most important Aboriginal artists, and Tanya continues this powerful legacy through her distinctive and contemporary practice.
Born into a strong artistic lineage, Tanya is the daughter of respected artists Paddy Bird and Eileen Bird, and the granddaughter of acclaimed artist Ada Bird Petyarre. She has inherited not only the stories of her Country but also a deep cultural knowledge that informs every brushstroke.
Tanya paints several important Dreamings, including Women’s Ceremony, Body Paint, and Bush Medicine Leaves—each carrying profound cultural meaning connected to identity, Country, and ancestral knowledge.
Tanya’s work is instantly recognisable for its refined detail and fluid movement. Her compositions often feature either bold, contrasting colour palettes or sophisticated monochromatic tones, allowing her works to sit beautifully in both contemporary and classic interiors.
Her interpretation of the Bush Medicine Leaves Dreaming is particularly distinctive. The leaves are depicted with a soft, circular motion—symbolising the natural way they fall and scatter across the land. This sense of movement creates a rhythmic, almost meditative quality across the canvas.
In her Body Paint Dreaming, Tanya captures the ceremonial designs painted onto women’s bodies, along with the patterns formed in the sand as they move through sacred ceremony. These works are a visual expression of cultural continuity—honouring ancestors, celebrating Country, and preserving knowledge passed down through generations.
Tanya is available for commissioned pieces, offering collectors the opportunity to acquire a bespoke artwork created specifically for their space. Each commission remains true to her cultural narratives while allowing for subtle considerations such as size and colour palette.