Accession No

2020.19


Description

Woven 'praise' pir or palm leaf mat by Raffaela Takane, Monika Takane, Efa Tontinyap and Balbina Bam, used in the jimi pir feast, decorated with a tree and frog designs


Place

Oceania; Melanesia; New Guinea; West Papua


Period

21st century


Source

Powell Davies, Tom [collector]; Crowther-Beynon Grant [monetary donor]


Department

Anth


Reference Numbers

2020.19; MAA: MN0184.6


Cultural Affliation

Asmat


Material

plant; sago palm; pigment; lime (burnt shell); clay


Local Term

pir


Measurements

690mm x 800mm


Events

Description (Physical description)
Woven 'praise' pir or palm leaf mat by Raffaela Takane, Monika Takane, Efa Tontinyap and Balbina Bam, used in the jimi pir feast, decorated with a tree and frog designs
Event Date 10/1/2019
Author: rachel hand


Context (Field collection)
Part of a Crowther Beynon collection by Tom Powell Davies which investigates how Asmat people have recognised the word of God in the journeys of their ancestors, and how they have used ancestral forms of ritual and making to forge their own quintessentially Asmat form of Catholic liturgy

The specific contents of the collection were decided in conjunction with senior female ritual leaders, who wanted to give the MAA a complete set of the weavings used in their church. Powell Davies also requested they make an example of the traditional weaving used in ancestral feasts, as a point of reference so that viewers will be able to see both the weaving’s original ritual form as well as how it has been developed within the Asmat Catholic church. While there are a small number of Asmat weavings in existing museum collections, this is the first collection to be accompanied by any kind of research. It is also the first Asmat-focused museum project to be designed in collaboration with Asmat people.

All the weavings submitted to the MAA are commissioned copies of ‘sacred’ works that are not allowed to be sold or removed from the local church building for which they are made. As such they are completely unique outside of Asmat and exist in no other collection. Just as a feast cannot proceed unless the complete set of sacred tools required for it are present, it was important to the weavers that what they made for the museum was comprehensive, showing in full the sacred arts they have invented within their church. Their makers envisaged the collection as a single, impartible set.


Details taken from Powell Davies' Initial report and object list: Asmat weaving and the foundation of an indigenous Catholicism, based on the Crowther Beynon application, "Gereje, 'Enculturation' and the role of material culture in the foundation of an indigenous Asmat Catholicism"
Event Date 10/1/2019
Author: rachel hand


Context (Production / use)
One of four pír mats laid on the ground surrounding the altar in the church depicting an element of God's creation, which is held and raised towards the sky in praise during the weekly Sunday liturgy.
From Asmat sacred arts and the transformation of ancestral ritual: the pír and Christmas feasts. Crowther Beynon interim report, Tom Powell Davies, 21/01/2019
Event Date 7/2/2019
Author: rachel hand


FM:282500

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