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  1. In 1974 filmmaker Ian Dunlop visited Yayayi, a remote community in Central Australia where Pintupi had recently moved to get away from the difficulties of living at the larger permanent government settlement of Papunya. Dunlop had come to Yayayi to follow up on the lives of people he had photographed ten years earlier as they were leaving their Western Desert homeland. He never made a film ...

  2. IAN DUNLOP ART. My artwork encompasses the experiences of my off-and-on career as a musician, memories of my 1950's childhood and the chaos and cacophony that surge through this era of accelerated pace and increasing uncertainty. Making 'art' still offers a child-like wonder of being able to get lost in color, shapes and slogans. Pop, country ...

  3. 503K Followers, 3,249 Following, 8,818 Posts - Ian Dunlap (@themasterinvestor) on Instagram: " Founder of Red Panda GREATEST INVESTOR OF THIS ERA Creator of Market Mondays w/@earnyourleisure @forbes @breakfastclubam & @goodmorningamerica"

  4. Remembering Yayayi. Pip Deveson. Fred Myers. Ian Dunlop. 2014. 57 minutes. In 1974 filmmaker Ian Dunlop visited Central Australia to follow up on thelives of Pintupi people he had photographed ten years earlier as they wereleaving their Western Desert homeland. The Pintupi were by this time tryingto establish an independent settlement at Yayayi ...

  5. 14. Sept. 2021 · Film News. · September 14, 2021. Ian Dunlop with Spencer (Nuni) Banaga, son of Djagamarra and Gadabi, from the first part of ‘Desert People’, filmed in 1965. Australia lost a pioneering documentary filmmaker this week with the passing of Ian Dunlop in Canberra. A friend and colleague, Ian’s People of the Western Desert, begun in 1965 and ...

  6. Avsnitt 2. Publicerades: Mån 3 apr 2017 06:00 3 apr 2017 • 15 min. Engelsk nybörjarkurs med Ian Dunlop, Sidney Coulson och Mary Fraser.Mer om programmet

  7. Ian Dunlop filmed the ceremony for Film Australia in 1976 with the great, then observational documentary DOP (Director of Photography), Dean Semler. Denise Haslem, Rose Hesp and myself similarly recorded the ceremony in 2002 in Yirrkala. In 2003 the ceremony was once again staged at Gurka’wuy and filmed by Kos Tambling.'