Accession No
2012.86
Description
Rectangular shaped woman's barkcloth skirt or nioge, decorated with concentric diamond shapes in red and yellow on reddish brown. Created by Sarah Ugibari
Place
Oceania; Melanesia; Papua New Guinea; Oro Province; Mount Lamington
Period
21st century
Source
Ömie Artists [vendor]; Art Fund [monetary donor]; V&A Purchase Fund [monetary donor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
2012.86; 11- 134 (Ömie Artists' Catalogue number)
Cultural Affliation
Ömie
Material
Barkcloth; Pigment
Local Term
Nioge (woman's barkcloth skirt); Soru’e (vinohu’e, jö’o sor’e ohu’o taigu taigu’e). Ancestral tattoo designs (Design of the belly button, uncurling fern fronds and pattern of a leaf).
Measurements
730mm x 1110mm
Events
Context (CMS Context)
Purchased from the Omie Artists, Newtown NSW, Australia (Omieartists.com, who are represented by Brennan King) though the assistance of the Art Fund, the V&A Purchase Fund and private donors.
ÖMIE ARTISTS (Inc.) is a cooperative of Ömie tribeswomen barkcloth painters from Mt. Lamington in Oro Province, Papua New Guinea. Barkcloth is the traditional textile of the Ömie tribe. Ancient clan designs are either painted with natural pigments in freehand onto the cloth or the cloth is dyed in river mud and the designs are appliquéd. Women wear nioge (skirts) while men wear givai (loincloths). Barkcloth serves important purposes in marriage, funerary and initiation ceremonies as well as utilitarian purposes such as blankets. Ömie barkcloths are still worn today by men, women and children during traditional ceremonies which can involve feasting and spectacular performances of singing, dancing and kundu-drumming. Nioge have been produced by Ömie women for gallery exhibitions since the cooperative was founded in 2004.
Women prepare the barkcloth by harvesting the inner bark pulp of rainforest trees which they then pound and fold repetitiously on flat stones in the river until a strong, fibrous sheet of cloth is produced. The cloth is then left to cure in the sun. The red, yellow and black coloured pigments are created from fruits, ferns, leaves and ash. Common painting implements include strong grasses, fashioned wooden sticks and frayed betelnut husks.
In 1951 Huvaemo erupted which correlated with the coming of the first missionaries who banned the ancient initiation ceremony known as the ujawé that involved tattooing clan insignia (sor'e) onto the skin. The Dahorurajé clan Chiefs Warrimou and Nogi took the eruption as a warning from the Spirit of Huvaemo and the ancestors to all Ömie people - they must hold onto their traditional culture and turn away from these outsiders. So the Chiefs spread the word throughout the tribe to encourage the women to paint their tattoo designs onto the barkcloth to appease the ancestors. And so triumphantly, the Ömie have managed to preserve their traditional tattoo designs through the women's strong barkcloth painting tradition.
Traditional Ömie culture as well as Ömie territory's lush rainforests, wild rivers and sacred creation sites such as the volcano Huvaemo and Mount Obo provide a plethora of subjects from which the artists continue to draw inspiration for their painting designs.
Ömie Artists is fully owned and governed by Ömie people. Five Art Centres service artists across eight villages and each of the centres play a vital role by ensuring that Ömie art and culture remains strong and by providing economic returns to their artists. Ömie Artists' Manager works closely with a Committee of Art Centre Coordinators to facilitate sustainable production and ethical sales of artists' works and to protect the rights of the artists. The Manager and Committee work in close consultation with clan Chiefs and elders to ensure that traditional Ömie clan copyright laws have been upheld and highly sacred information withheld before distribution.
Since the first exhibition in 2006 the barkcloth art of the Ömie women has been highly celebrated, culminating in the National Gallery of Victoria's landmark exhibition Wisdom of the Mountain: Art of the Ömie in 2009. Artists have also been included in major exhibitions such as Cloth That Grows on Trees at the Textile Museum of Canada in 2007; 17th Biennale of Sydney at the Museum of Contemporary Art in 2010; and Paperskin: The Art of Tapa Cloth at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa in 2010. In 2012 a major exhibition of Ömie art will be mounted at the Fowler Museum at UCLA and the de Young Museum in the USA. Significant collections of Ömie art are held in both public and private collections including the National Gallery of Victoria, National Gallery of Australia, and Queensland Art Gallery.
Text: © Brennan King, Ömie Artists Manager [no date but website accessed 18/11/2012]
Event Date 19/11/2012
Author: maa
Description (CMS Description)
Rectangular shaped woman's barkcloth skirt or nioge, decorated with concentric diamond shapes in red and yellow on reddish brown, representing ancestral tattoo designs (Design of the belly button, uncurling fern fronds and pattern of a leaf). Titled Soru’e (vinohu’e, jö’o sor’e ohu’o taigu taigu’e). Created by Sarah Ugibari
Event Date 19/11/2012
Author: maa
Loan (Exhibition)
Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Cologne, Germany, 12 October 2013 to 27 April 2014. , 12/10/2013 to 27/04/2014, Tapa: Art works and Identites in Oceania
Event Date 12/10/2013
Author: rachel hand
Context (CMS Context)
Exhibited: on loan to the Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Cologne, Germany, for Tapa: Art Works and Identities in Oceania, 11 October, 2013- 27 April 2014. Returned 2 June. Requested and agreed at Feb 2013 Museum Committee.
Event Date 17/6/2014
Author: Rachel Hand
FM:38792
Images (Click to view full size):