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Exhibitions

Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters
22 November 2025 - 15 March 2026
Humayun’s Tomb World Heritage Site Museum, New Delhi
Tjukurrpa Kungkarrangkalpa — Kulyuru and Kuru Ala 1994 by Betty Laidlaw and Nyumitja Laidlaw, Warburton Arts Project, Warburton Collection, WAC 124 (L), © the artists/Copyright Agency 2020, Image: National Museum of Australia
Minyipuru at Pangkal 2016 by Mulyatingki Marney, Nancy Nyanjilpayi Chapman and May Maywokka Chapman, Martumili Artists, © The artists/Copyright Agency 2020, Image: National Museum of Australia
Kungkarangkalpa Attila 2014 by Tjunkaya Tapaya, Ernabella Arts, © the artist/Copyright Agency 2020, Image: National Museum of Australia
About the exhibition:
This landmark First Nations exhibition narrates the epic creation saga of the Seven Sisters, a dramatic story of journey, desire, and survival across the Australian desert. It showcases how ancient knowledge, songs, dances, and laws (tjukurrpa) are deeply interwoven with the land itself
Featuring nearly 300 paintings, objects, photographs, songs, and multimedia works, Songlines immerses visitors in one of the world's oldest living cultures — a tradition sustained for over 65,000 years
Highlights
DomeLab Installation: The world's highest-resolution travelling dome, offering an immersive experience of Seven Sisters rock art and constellations like Orion and the Pleiades.
Interactive Storytelling: Visitors can 'walk' the songlines — pathways that map waterholes, food sources, and ancestral stories.
Community-led Curation: Developed through collaboration with Anangu traditional custodians and Indigenous curators to preserve and transmit ancestral knowledge
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