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'My Country' wallpapers bring Spring to your home

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In the UK Spring has arrived with lambs tripping across daffodiled fields. To bring some of that beautiful outside spirit in your home our Joycie Yellow is the perfect choice. Joycie Yellow is often used to brighten bathrooms and kitchens. The many colours artist Joycie Pitjara Morton used in the original painting have translated splendidly onto the wallpaper. The oranges and greens pop depending on the light and angle its viewed at so there’s endless choices of fabric colours for blinds or other soft furnishings you can pair it with - including our own fabric collection. Or you can opt for one of our other ‘My Country’ wallpapers which are equally as endearing with their depictions of sacred outback Australian land.

Our wallpapers suit many residential and commercial projects and have been used across the world in English period homes, French chateus , and contemporary houses who’ve opted for minimalism but needing a pop of colour and design with soul.

What’s your favourite?

Stock is held in Australia so if you’re an Australian customer please be assured your ordered will be sent from there. If you contact us and you don’t get a reply please check your Spam. We always reply immediately.

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Invasion Day or Australia Day?

The Central Desert of Australia with the MacDonnell ranges running through the background

The Central Desert of Australia with the MacDonnell ranges running through the background

Long before the debate between calling 26 January Invasion Day or Australia Day began, the concept of celebrating the destruction of Australia’s indigenous culture sat very uneasily with me. At school we learnt that the Aboriginals in New South Wales were virtually wiped out within years of white men landing on Australian shores. This wholesale destruction wrought disease during a futile attempt to defend their land, lives and culture.

Each year I thought more and more about the Aboriginal inhabitants of Australia, past and present, and I felt increasingly confident to say it was not OK to celebrate Australia Day without acknowledging them and their experience of violence, deaths in custody, racism, neglect and genocidal destruction of their land and culture at the hands of many over our 233 year occupancy.

As recent example of this last year a Rio Tinto, a French owned company demolished the Juukan Gorge caves in the Pilbara region, Western Australian, caves housing some of the world’s oldest and most important rock art in the world. For iron ore. In direct contravention of the traditional owners wishes. UNESCO experts compared the destruction of this important historical site to the destruction of Palmyra by ISIS.

The Aboriginals still suffer a great deal of racism, even this week I was told by an Australian that the products I make with them might struggle to sell in Australia as they are by Aboriginal artists. The fact that much of Australia celebrates by drinking themselves into an alcoholic stupor while deriding the Aboriginals for drinking the introduced substance leaves a taste of bitter irony in my mouth. And not just mine but many people who stand with the Aboriginals on this day of mourning for their losses.

Australia is made of up immigrants from every war waged since the occupation of Australia. This is something the Country should be proud of, something that should be celebrated. Australia has provided a safe haven for many desperately displaced people from all over the world including Italians, Greeks, Lebanese, Vietnamese, Chinese (the Uighurs more recently), Cambodians, Sri Lankans, South Africans, Zimbabweans, Somalians and Eritreans.

Perhaps we can find a day to celebrate this achievement rather than the yearly juxtaposition of pain and loss alongside a celebration of a devastatingly destructive invasion?

And perhaps Australia can finally reconcile itself that it is time to accept and celebrate it’s original owners: the Aboriginals of Australia.

NEWS, News

Merry Christmas and New Year 2021

Our new Rosie Blue and Rosie Pink Cushions from artwork by Central Desert artists, Rosie Ngwarraye Ross.  These cushion are also on sale at Cotswold Trading, Broadway.

Our new Rosie Blue and Rosie Pink Cushions from artwork by Central Desert artists, Rosie Ngwarraye Ross. These cushion are also on sale at Cotswold Trading, Broadway.

Wishing all our clients, collaborators and especially our wonderful Artists and all the Art Centre staff a happy festive period. The last couple of years have brought Australia many challenges with the fires and now the pandemic. Despite the distances we’re all working hard to bring you beautiful art and new ‘My Country’ interior offerings. We hope you love our work and continue to support the Gallery and everyone we work with.

Bay Gallery Home is open with limited opening hours between 28 December to 31 December 2020. We are open between 1100-1500 (give or take) and open by appointment so please call 07776 157 066 or email alexandra@baygalleryhome.com to arrange a visit.

We have many new exciting developments to share with you so keep an eye on our website.

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Home interiors inspiration

Cotswolds clients bought “his” and “her” paintings for their new extension bringing warm hues to the grey wall creating a warm, cosy space for the winter months.

Cotswolds clients bought “his” and “her” paintings for their new extension bringing warm hues to the grey wall creating a warm, cosy space for the winter months.

Since we’ve reopened Bay Gallery Home has been blessed with many visitors who are looking to buy from our Art and ‘My Country’ interiors collection. Simply put many of them were bored of looking at blank walls and wanted something to stimulate them visually while spending extended periods at home. Our Aboriginal art & interiors are steeped in sacred stories and 60, 000 years of history. Clients comment it gives them a sense of peace, grounding them in an ancient world where people lived with their Country rather than dominating it. While some (or most) of us are feeling lost and bewildered separated from family and friends we can immerse ourselves in this incredible culture and seek solace in its beauty and spirituality.

Our gallery’s products suite maximalist room schemes as well as catering to those who like the simplicity of minimalism. You can opt for a carnival of pattern and colour or stump for simple lines using traditional colours depicting desert forms. Over the next few weeks we will be sharing mood board ideas. We also have some exciting new fabrics to share with you and are busy making for a House & Garden shoot.

When buying from Bay Gallery Home you are supporting the Central Desert Aboriginal communities we represent as well as British designers and manufacturers.

For more information about the featured artists please contact alexandra@baygalleryhome.com

News, NEWS

New face masks have arrived!

Teddy Jakamarra Gibson, Emu Dreaming face mask

Teddy Jakamarra Gibson, Emu Dreaming face mask

A range of Australian made 100% cotton face masks featuring beautiful Aboriginal Artwork have just arrived! There’s a filter pocket on the inside of the mask and using the adjustable nose wire, you can adjust the mask for a close fit to your face. Elastic loops fit around your ears to hold the mask in place. 
One size fits most. They are machine washable; washing is recommended after every use.

This mask does not claim to give you respiratory protection from viruses but may help prevent the spread of germs to others.

The Artists whose work is featured on the masks receive a royalty from the sale of each one benefiting them and their Community.

To see more designs and purchase go to:

https://www.baygalleryhome.com/face-masks-1


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Brands To Love: A Stunning Home Collection by Aboriginal Artists by Patricia Martin

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Patricia Martin is an American author, speaker, and analyst who tracks changes in the culture who recently featured Bay Gallery Home in her blog: Brands To Love.

Posted by  Patricia Martin 

http://patricia-martin.com

Good art is redemptive; just looking at it lights the lamp from within. When a brand meets that standard, it deserves a good long look.

Founded in 2008, Bay Gallery Home was started by former journalist, Alexandra O’Brien. She emigrated from the UK to Australia when she was four, before returning to England 20 years later. The gallery is nestled in the English Cotswolds in Gloucestershire and represents a range of artists from the communities of Australia’s Northern Territory. Featuring a breadth of works by emerging talent, as well as established artists, prices reflect that range from just over $200 to $5,000 US.

The award-winning My Country home collection, provides revenue streams for indigenous artists while expanding global awareness for their art. And oh, the art translated onto these wallpapers and fabrics is alive with flora and wild animals. Bold, beautiful abstracts drawn from Aboriginal mythology and culture explode with colors and patterns from the Australian outback, a place that stubbornly sits on my bucket list. Ms. O’Brien’s passionate approach is living proof that a visionary brand can deliver meaningful value to artists and their communities and everyone prospers. Sublime!

Take a look at Bay Gallery Home’s Australian Aboriginal art, ceramics, wallpaper here: baygalleryhome.com

Artist’s work featured in photo: Daisy Kemarre Turner

Photo Credit: Adam Carter Photography

        

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Postage during Lockdown

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Some of our orders are being delayed as our wonderful post office is operating limited hours so please bare with us while we get your orders out. DHL is operating as usual so any larger orders (including international) will be sent out within 24 hours of the order.

Post Office times in Tetbury are: 0900-1200 Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only.

Painting orders dependent on size they will be sent via Royal Mail or DHL - we aim to have them sent within 24 hours.

All smaller orders from our Homeware & Accessories range will go out the day of order or nearest following postal day.

Additionally, postage prices went up as of 1 March but we will not be passing those on until circumstances improve across the board.

We have enormous gratitude for the staff at the Tetbury Post Office and DHL for continuing to operate during this difficult time.

All the best to everyone.

Bay Gallery Home