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  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    8:37am, EST

    Australian trees made famous by Aboriginal artist destroyed; arson suspected

    Northern Territory Government

    The destruction of two iconic Ghost Gums painted by Albert Namatjira has saddened many Territorians, Minister for Indigenous Advancement, Alison Anderson, said today.

    By Reuters

    SYDNEY -- A pair of "ghost gum" trees in Australia's outback made famous in watercolors by Aboriginal artist Albert Namatjira have been destroyed in a suspected arson attack, shortly before they were due to be placed on a national heritage register.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Namatjira is credited with bringing ghost gums, native trees featured in Aboriginal Dreamtime stories and named for their white bark that glows in moonlight, to wider public consciousness as a symbol of Australian identity.

    Northern Territory Indigenous Advancement Minister Alison Anderson said the pair of ghost gums that frame the West MacDonnell Ranges and feature in many of the late Namatjira's works were found burned to the ground a few days ago.

    "In his watercolors (Namatjira) brought the beauty of the Central Australian landscape to the world and helped make it a symbol of Australian identity," Anderson said.

    Authorities believe the fire was likely deliberately lit.

    Susan McCulloch, author of McCulloch's Encyclopedia of Australian Art, told the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper the destruction of the ghost gums was "appalling and a tragic act of cultural vandalism."

    Born in the Northern Territory in 1902, Namatjira held his first exhibition in 1938 and painted for the next two decades, earning international acclaim before his death in 1959.

    Aboriginal Dreamtime stories have been passed down through generations to recount indigenous beliefs about the creation of the world and its creatures by totemic spirits in an era known as Dreamtime.

    A pair of famous "ghost gum" trees in Australia's outback have been destroyed in a suspected arson attack. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    33 comments

    sorry for the loss of the trees.also sorry you have immature jerks in your country...we have alot in the USA.

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    Explore related topics: australia, artist, arson, featured, aboriginal, gum-tree, albert-namatjira
  • 6
    Dec
    2011
    7:47am, EST

    3 charged in Muhammad cartoonist murder plot

    By Associated Press

    STOCKHOLM -- A Swedish prosecutor on Tuesday charged three men with plotting to murder an artist who depicted the Prophet Muhammad as a dog.

    The men, aged 23 to 26 and of Somali and Iraqi origin, were arrested in the city of Goteborg on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.


    According to the charges filed Tuesday, the men planned to stab to death artist Lars Vilks, who has faced numerous death threats over his drawing of Muhammad in 2007.

    An art gallery was evacuated in connection with the arrests, and police originally treated the case as a terror investigation. They later relabeled it as a murder plot.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    164 comments

    If Allah / God needs me to kill some one than this "great creator of the Universe" needs no worship from me. I mean, if you can create so much, do you really need mere humans to kill for you? No. So if someone says that your god needs to be defended with violence, tell that person to go to hell.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sweden, terrorism, dog, artist, muhammad, lars-vilks

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