Possum's father was Tjatjiti Tjungurrayai and his mother was Long Rose Nangala. After his father's death in the 1940s his mother married
Gwoya Jungarai, better known as
One Pound Jimmy, whose image was used on a well known Australian
postage stamp. His brother was Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri, whose artwork appeared on another stamp. His older brother Cassidy Possum Tjapaltjarri was a traditionalist who barely gone outside of the Yuelamu community and was one of the most respected elders till his passing in 2006, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri was the most famous of the
contemporary artists who lived around
Papunya, in the
Northern Territory's
Western Desert area, when the acrylic painting style (known popularly as "
dot art") was initiated.
Geoffrey Bardon came to Papunya in the early 1970s and encouraged the Aboriginal people to put their dreaming stories on canvas, stories which had previously been depicted ephemerally on the ground. Clifford Possum emerged as one of the leaders in this school of painting, which has come to be called the
Western Desert Art Movement. His first international exhibition was held in London at the Rebecca Hossack Gallery in 1990 and titled 'Clifford Possum and the Papunya Tula Artists. Possum was of the
Anmatyerre culture-linguistic group from around Alherramp (
Laramba) community. He was of the Peltharr
skin. When it held an exhibition of his work in 2004, the
Art Gallery of New South Wales described his artistic background: He was an expert wood-carver and took up painting long before the emergence of the
Papunya Tula School in the early 1970s. When Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri joined this group of 'dot and circle' painters early in 1972 he immediately distinguished himself as one of its most talented members and went on to create some of the largest and most complex paintings ever produced. Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri led a ground-breaking career and was amongst the vanguard of Indigenous Australian artists to be recognised by the international art world. Like
Albert Namatjira before him, Clifford Possum blazed a trail for future generations of Indigenous artists; bridging the gap between Aboriginal art and contemporary Australian art. ==Death and legacy==