Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori (c.1924 – 11 February 2015) was an Aboriginal Australian artist who at age 81 began painting in an abstract-like style she developed to represent her Country, on the south side of Bentinck Island in Queensland, Australia.
As a young woman she lived a traditional lifestyle on Bentinck Island, largely uninfluenced by Europeans.
She gathered food, including shellfish, from the complex system of stone fish traps her people had built in the shallows around the island.
She helped to build and maintain the stone walls of the fish traps, was an adept maker of string, and weaver of dillybags and coolamons, and a respected singer of Kaiadilt songs, which tell of the close ties her people had with their country.
[2]: 16 In 2005, when she was 81, Sally and Pat Gabori were living in the Aged Person Hostel at Gununa on Mornington Island.