One of Australia's most influential indigenous leaders Yunupingu has died in the Northern Territory, aged 74.
From political boardrooms to the Northern Territory bush, Yunupingu walked tall in two worlds, always with a fire burning deep inside.
Note to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers: Yunupingu's last name and image are used here in accordance with the wishes of his family.
He was a man of fire - or "Gurtha", one of his sacred Gumatj clan totems.
It was this fire, now extinguished, that lit the fuse of an extraordinary lifetime spent in the political trenches while hunting for rights, recognition and real empowerment for Australia's First Nations people.
A former Australian of the Year, Garma festival chairman, land rights stalwart, singer, painter and a force of community power, Yunupingu has passed away in Arnhem Land at age 74.
His eldest daughter, Binmila Yunupingu, said her father was "a person that always wanted to listen and learn and give, give the community, give his old people, something back".
"He was the best dad - he gave us everything," she said.
Yunupingu, the leader of northeast Arnhem Land's Gumatj clan, leaves a legacy of hope for Aboriginal Australians, despite often conceding he'd seen little change during his lifetime.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese led tributes to the Gumatj clan leader, saying he was a great leader and statesman.
"Yunupingu walked in two worlds within authority, power and grace, and he worked to make them whole - together," Albanese wrote on Twitter.
"He now walks in another place, but he has left such great footsteps for us to follow in this one."
Yunupingu rose to prominence in the land rights movement in the 1960s, and was part of the first Australian legal case which tested the native title rights of First Nations people.
Over the next fifty years Yunupingu went on to advise successive governments and was also celebrated as a singer, artist and promoter of Indigenous culture.
He helped set up the Northern Land Council, which represents traditional owners in the Northern Territory's Top End, and also helped create the Yothu Yindi Foundation, which is one of the peak advocacy bodies for Aboriginal Australians.
He was named Australian of the Year in 1978 and received an Order of Australia medal for his services to the Aboriginal community in 1985.
In recent years he advocated for constitutional recognition of Indigenous people through the Voice to Parliament, on which a national referendum will take place later this year.
His daughter, Binmila Yunupingu, said her father's death was a profound loss.
"Yunupingu lived his entire life on his land, surrounded by the sound of bilma (clapsticks), yidaki (didgeridoo) and the manikay (sacred song) and dhulang (sacred designs) of our people. He was born on our land… and he died on our land secure in the knowledge that his life's work was secure," she said.
The Yothu Yindi Foundation described Yunupingu as "a giant of the nation".
"He was first and foremost a leader of his people, whose welfare was his most pressing concern and responsibility," a spokesperson said in a statement.
Reporting by Matt Garrick, Tiffanie Turnbull and Tom Housden.
- ABC / BBC