Indigico Creative Studio
Indigico Aboriginal Canvas Print - Framed or Unframed - 'Paradise' artwork
Indigico Aboriginal Canvas Print - Framed or Unframed - 'Paradise' artwork
Couldn't load pickup availability
'Paradise' artwork by Aboriginal Artist, Amy Allerton (Gumbaynggirr, Bundajlung and Gamilaroi).
Printed with museum grade, archival Epson inks on 495gsm Matte Canvas. Stretched and float framed in premium 1cm wide x 5.5cm deep Tasmanian Oak, Black Matte or White Matte, with a 5mm 'shadow' line between frame and canvas. Ready to hang.
Price includes FREE domestic shipping within Australia.
International Shipping - Price on Application.


Artwork Story
We are part of an ancient Paradise that has existed since the beginning of time. This Paradise brings together every story that was and will be, and weaves them into the fabric of Country, creating an eternal flowing river that sustains life, teaches, guides and connects all things.
As long as the river continues to flow through Country, we will continue to walk in the ancient Paradise that we have called home for tens of thousands of years. But paradise is much more than Country, more than a place.
Paradise is the beating heart of our people, where our culture and communities thrive; it is the stories we share, the legacies we forge and the future we build. Paradise lives within us and all around us, it is the strength that carries us forward and the flowing river that holds our spirits forever.
-
About the Artist
Shop all Art by Amy AllertonAmy Allerton is the owner and founder of Indigico Creative, a graphic designer, photographer and contemporary Aboriginal artist. Amy is a Gumbaynggirr and Bundjalung woman whose family’s traditional land is located in the Clarence Valley in a rural area called Cangai in NSW. Amy’s identity is strongly grounded in Gomeroi culture, history, dreaming, art and language having been born and raised in Tamworth, NSW, where she still lives with her husband and two children.
Amy first started her business journey as a graphic designer in 2014 and, after reconnecting with her artistic roots, Amy merged her skills in digital communication design with her art expression to deliver a modern approach to Aboriginal storytelling in the form of digital art. Amy’s artworks are an extension from her journey of exploring her own cultural identity. Using structure, pattern and symmetry, she uses art to create order out of chaotic emotional themes such as womanhood, motherhood, family, spirituality, purpose and connection, influenced by her own experiences of mental illness, chronic illness and generational trauma.
Amy also explores traditional art through contemporary expressions in acrylic painting, as well as expressing the beauty and peace in minimalism through textured art.