It’s that time of year again when the Art Gallery of NSW gets down and populist with its Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes to be announced next Friday. The Archibald is the ‘Big Telstra’ equivalent, of course. But the greatest Indigenous significance this year lies in the Wynne, where landscape is the priority and three and a half works fall into the Indigenous category. And the glorious double canvas from Tjala Arts in Amata in the distant APY Lands looks a sure-fire winner to this biased viewer!

The five Ken Sisters “ Tjungkara Ken, Yaritji Young, Freda Brady, Maringka Tunkin and Sandra Ken – have tackled their ‘Seven Sisters Tjukurrpa’ collaboratively, somehow communicating the harmony of a single artist while each contributing something individual to the substantial work. Brilliant desert colours make it the stand-out work in a trio of rooms where non-Indigenous artists reflect the grey/green or dun colouring of the Aussie landscape in most of their works. What joy that desert artists were given acrylics to reflect the landscape of their mind’s eyes rather than ochres that actually derive from that Country. Win or lose, four of the five sisters will be in Sydney next Friday for the traditional noon announcement of the winners “ expect a bit of singing and dancing if they’ve got the Wynne gong.

The Ken family are traditional owners for some of the significant sites where the Seven Sisters story takes place. Their painting refers to this story, which explains the movement of what we call the Pleiades stars across the sky in a group, also describing the landscape that the story takes place in and the characters in the story “ which are actually one and the same. The Seven Sisters and Watti Niru (the bad man trying to have his evil way with the Sisters) change shape throughout the story “ to form rocks or trees or different bush tucker and animals.

When sitting down to have a chat with the women about the work and the story behind it, explains Natalie O’Connor, Manager of Tjala Arts, they talk about family. In the Seven Sisters story, the elder sisters protect and teach the younger sisters and keep them from falling for the tricks of Watti Niru. The women say this is how family works in Anangu culture “ the elder women teach the young women.

Also showing in the Wynne are two Papunya Tula entries: a prime George Tjungurrayi canvas and a fine Yakultji Napangarti work “ both offering op-art reflections on the sand-dunes of the Western Desert around Kintore, where they paint.

And, talking of reflections, just round the corner from the Tjungurrayi work is an Imants Tillers multi-canvas artwork that appears to be about Venice (isn’t the Wynne for the best landscape painting of Australian scenery???) including the odd words, Oh Venice/Your Sea Contains Dangerous Fits of Anger/May God Decree Your Lagoon/Become an Unrippled Lake. But then, just maybe, the Aussie landscape enters the picture via some ripples that seem to have lifted off George Tjungurrayi’s work “ sand magically mutating into water in the artist’s post-Modern hands.

The Tillers is, therefore, the half Indigenous work referred to above.

Meanwhile, there’s only one Aboriginal subject in the Archibald this year “ a self-portrait by serial prize-winner, Tony Albert. Not content with taking out both the $100,000 Basil Sellers Art Prize and the $50,000 Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award in 2014, he’s just won the world’s richest landscape prize with his work ‘The Hand You’re Dealt’ “ a collage of playing cards, many with tasteless Indigenous designs. An odd definition, once again, of ‘landscape’ “ but it must have satisfied the judges of the $65,000 Fleurieu Art Prize for Landscape, who were Nigel Hurst, Director, Saatchi Gallery London; Suhanya Raffel, Deputy Director, AGNSW; and Erica Green, Director, Samstag Museum of Art in Adelaide, where the show “ including such well-known names as Brook Andrew, Robert Hannaford, Nicholas Harding, Tim Johnson, Ildiko Kovacs, Janet Laurence, Noel McKenna, Danie Mellor, Jeff Mincham, Rodney Pople, Joan Ross, Imants Tillers (again), Aida Tomescu, Hossein Valamanesh, and Philip Wolfhagen “ will be on until 29 July.

I must admit I don’t fancy Albert’s chances in the Archibald “ where he’s up against strong competition from the likes of Guan (or should that be David) Wei, David Fairbairn, Michael McWilliams and Abdul Abdullah in my humble opinion.

But it’s an interesting work “ actually a spare, single canvas for once after a series of installations and photographs by Albert. It shows our Tony apparently being painted by the cartoon figure of Tinka “ the extraordinarily popular Aboriginal kid created by the late Viola Edith (Brownie) Downing for a series of books she wrote in the 1930s as she travelled around the world. They even made a TV series from them in America. Much of Albert’s work has involved reusing and re-contextualising mid-20th Century images of Aboriginal scenes, even ashtrays where you stubbed your butt out on a Black boy. So this development is logical, also finding common cause with Brook Andrew and Marcia Langton in Andrew’s show ‘Taboo‘ at the MCA, where he appropriated Eric Joliffe’s equally popular Witchetty Tribe cartoons from the same era.

At least we know what won’t win the Archibald. For today Melbourne artist Betina Fauvel-Ogden won the 2016 Packing Room Prize with her portrait of renowned restaurateur and MasterChef Australia judge, George Calombaris, and the Packing Room prize-winner, invariably of a well-known face, just never goes on to win the Archie proper.

Finally, there’s the Sulman Prize, judged this year by Brisbane Blak artist, Judy Watson. No one ever knows what the criteria are, for it’s supposed to be for the best genre or subject painting, representing some aspect or aspects of everyday life. Reko Rennie’s ‘Warrior’, wearing Rennie’s non-camouflage, his spear raised against a hyper-pink, orange and yellow background, doesn’t strike me as everyday life, even for a Melbourne-based Blak artist. But it’s colourful!