The Artist is a Thief

The Artist is a Thief

by StephenGray (Author)

Synopsis

Winner of the Australian/Vogel's Literary Award 2000...Margaret Thatcher Gandarrwuy is an internationally renowned Aboriginal artist from the remote Mission Hole community in the Northern Territory. Her works command high prices - until a new painting is unveiled. It is discovered slashed, with the words hastily scrawled across it, 'The artist is a thief'. Is the artist a thief? Is she to blame, or is she the victim of somebody else's fraud?..This is a philosophical detective novel with a difference, set in a world where everyone but the 'detective' knows the rules. Jean-Loup Wild, a Melbourne financial consultant sent by ATSIC to Mission Hole, is caught between the art world, with its wealth, fashions, heroes and sophisticated private language, and the Aboriginal community with its poverty, social problems, kinship ties and unchanging traditional law. If Jean-Loup can find the artist he can begin to find the secret of what has been happening at Mission Hole. He can begin, also, to understand how the layers of that mystery lie deep in the bedrock of Australian society.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 300
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Pty LTD
Published: 01 Oct 2001

ISBN 10: 1865085332
ISBN 13: 9781865085333
Book Overview: Winner of the 2000 The Australian/Vogel Award.Honoured as the SMH's Best Young Novelists of the Year, 2001.Shortlisted in the Braille Book of the year category, 2002 Vision Australia Library Awards. Nominated for the 2003 International IM
Prizes: Winner of Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists 2001 and Australian / Vogel Literary Award 2000. Shortlisted for Ned Kelly Awards for Australian Crime Writing: Best First Novel 2002.

Author Bio
STEPHEN GRAY is a writer and law lecturer who has been living in Darwin since 1989. He teaches subjects in copyright law and indigenous peoples and the law, amongst others, and is involved in teaching indigenous students. Since 1991 he has published a number of articles about indigenous legal issues, including several concerning ways in which indigenous people can gain legal protection for their art and culture. His first novel, Lungfish, won the Jessie Litchfield Award for Literature and was published by Northern Territory University Press in 1999.