Lingiari died on 21 January 1988. One of Australia's largest electorates is named after Lingiari. The
Division of Lingiari encompasses nearly all of the Northern Territory as well as
Christmas Island and the
Cocos Islands. It includes
Daguragu and traditional Gurindji lands. The story of Lingiari is celebrated in the song "
From Little Things Big Things Grow" written by
Paul Kelly and Indigenous musician
Kev Carmody and recorded by Kelly in 1991. It was later added to the
Sounds of Australia archive. The
Vincent Lingiari Memorial Lectures have been held at the
Casuarina campus amphitheatre of
Charles Darwin University since 1996, featuring speakers as diverse as
Gough Whitlam,
Marcia Langton,
Malcolm Fraser,
Pat Dodson and
Bruce Pascoe. The Lingiari Foundation was established in 2001, "to promote reconciliation and to develop Aboriginal leadership", chaired by
Pat Dodson until it dissolved in 2016. The foundation donated a portrait of Dodson painted by
Melbourne-based artist
Zhou Xiaoping, to the
National Portrait Gallery in Canberra. The story of his part in the strike is also told in Irish folk musician
Damien Dempsey's song "Wave Hill Walk Off", on his 2016 album
No Force on Earth. The Vincent Lingiari Cup, is an
Aussie rules football competition that takes place at the annual
Freedom Day Festival each year in Kalkaringi.
Vincent Lingiari Art Award The Vincent Lingiari Art Award was created in 2016 by the
Central Land Council (CLC) and
Desart, on the 50th anniversary of the Gurindji strike, and 40 years after the Land Rights Act was passed. CLC is the
land council for
Central Australia, while Desart represents over 40 Aboriginal art centres in the region. The award intentionally has a political focus, in particular relating to land and water rights for Aboriginal people. In 2021, the theme was water rights, expressed as "Ngawa, Ngapa, Kapi, Kwatja, Water", intended to "raise awareness of our struggle against massive water theft that threatens the survival of desert plants, animals and people and for safe drinking water for our remote communities", according to the CEO of Desart, Philip Watkins. The award paintings were exhibited from 8 September at the Tangentyere Artists Gallery, and a second award was also introduced, the Delegates Choice Award. There were a record 47 entries for the award. == See also ==