Papua New Guinean art
Papua New Guinean art has a long rich diverse tradition. In particular, it is world-famous for carved wooden sculpture: masks, canoes and story-boards. Papua New Guinea also has a wide variety of clay, stone, bone, animal and natural die art. Many of the best collections of these are held in overseas museums.
Some of the artists regarded as being in the first wave of contemporary art in Papua New Guinea are: Mathias Kauage OBE (born 1944), Timothy Akis, and Joe Nalo, all from the tough urban area of Port Moresby. Kauage won Australia's Blake Prize for Religious Art, four of his works are in the Gallery of Modern Art in Glasgow, and he had a solo show in 2005 at the Horniman Museum, "Kauage's Visions: Art from Papua New Guinea". Other noted Papua New Guinean visual artists include Larry Santana, and .[1]
The works shown below, in composite images, were done while the artists were visiting California but are traditional in content and medium.[2]
A male spirit dance mask from Kabriman Village, Blackwater River Basin, East Sepik Province, 1960-1973. In the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Carved tree trunks, Stanford sculpture garden.
Views of wooden sculpture by Yesu Minja and Nanqui Nokwi, Membor Apokiom and Naui Saunambui, from Bangwis village, Kwoma, sponsored by Bonnie Brae, Stanford University.
The Nouméa Biennale (an art fair in New Caledonia) includes works from Papua New Guinea.
See also[]
- Culture of Papua New Guinea
- Sepik art
- Melanesian art
- Overmodelled skull
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Art of Papua New Guinea. |
- ^ "Niugini Arts". Archived from the original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
- ^ http://www.stanford.edu/~mjpeters/png/. Archived 2006-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
- Papua New Guinean culture
- Art by country
- Visual arts stubs