Linda Puna is a Yankunytjatjara artist from the remote community of Mimili on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands. Linda spent her formative years on her homeland around Park Well. Sharing a house with her cousins, sisters and parents, Linda grew up surrounded by skilled artisans and storytellers, learning about the stories that inform her paintings today by watching and listening to the women in her family carve punu (wooden sculptures). The men in Linda’s family were working as stockmen on the surrounding stations at the time, an experience that continues to imbue her love for loud country music, cowboys, and storytelling.
As one of the founding members of Mimili Maku Arts, Linda began bringing her stories to the canvas in 2006. Her paintings often combine Tjukurpa and figurative depictions of everyday community life. As the first Anangu woman to live in a remote community whilst being dependent on an electric wheelchair, Linda shares a unique perspective on life in her art – full of joy, resilience, and strength. Linda often depicts elements of the rocky desert country surrounding Mimili, referencing the Maku (witchetty grub) Tjukurpa. Her paintings combine these songlines with more figurative depictions of day-to-day objects such as Toyota 4WD vehicles, houses, cardboard boxes, windmills and watertanks.
Linda has exhibited widely, and was a finalist in the 2020 National Works on Paper Prize at the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery. In 2022 she celebrated her fashion debut as part of acollaboration with ethical fashion label Unreal Fur, a project which was awarded the Community Collaboration Award at the National Indigenous Fashion Awards.