Kaapa was an Indigenous Australian, born in remote Central Australia around 1920. Kaapa worked on a cattle station at
Haasts Bluff before moving to Papunya in the 1960s, In 1971 a local official, Jack Cooke, took six of Kaapa's paintings from Papunya into Alice Springs, entering one of them in a local competition, the Caltex Art Award. On 27 August that picture,
Gulgardi, also referred to as
Men’s Ceremony for the Kangaroo, Gulgardi, shared the first prize with a work by Jan Wesley Smith. The picture, approximately 140 by 60 centimetres in size, was painted on an old plywood cupboard door that still had rusty nails in it, as well as holes where the handle once had been. ==Reception==