Sally M Nangala Mulda was born at Erldunda, then her family lived at Maryvale, now Tapatjatjaka (Titjikala Community), and currently resides in Mpwetyerre (Abbott’s Town Camp) by Lherre Mparntwe (Todd River).
Sally paints her stories, shared by many Indigenous Australians, with emotional and political honesty and humour. Her figurative paintings depict the lived experience of contemporary town camp life, cataloguing domestic scenes of cooking damper and talking story. Alongside these, Sally presents insights into life since the 2007 Northern Territory Intervention – police pouring out grog and unhoused people camping in the riverbed.
Sally began painting with Tangentyere Artists in 2008 and is now celebrated as a significant contemporary artist, known for her distinctive figurative and colourful painting style. Her work is held in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Art Gallery of South Australia, Artbank and the Utrecht Museum of Contemporary Aboriginal Art collections, as well as many private collections. She has been a finalist in the Archibald Prize (2021), Sir John Sulman Prize (2023, 2022, 2021, 2019) and Telstra NATSIAA (2024, 2019, 2018, 2012) and Highly Commended in the 42nd and 44th Alice Prize (2022, 2024). Sally and Yarrenyty Arltere artist Marlene Rubuntja were recipients of the 2022 ACMI + Artbank Commission and the resulting body of work is touring nationally.