IDNO
DG.101969.PAO
Description
Portrait of Otor anak Sunjam and his wife, Sumuk Nuong (Sajon), sitting on plastic wire-backed chairs in a corner of their house. Otor wears a long-sleeved batik shirt and trousers; Sumuk Nuong wears a long-sleeved blouse and patterned sarong.
Between them, placed against the wooden plank wall, is a glass display cabinet with three shelves. On the top of the cabinet and upper two shelves are various objects, including heirlooms such as ceramic tableware, ?brass trinkets, miniature models, a carve wooden elephant, a bonsai tree, and some framed photographs. On the bottom shelf are piles of documents.
On the wall above the cabinet are mounted three framed photographs. Next to them, leaning in the corner, are ritual staffs used in adat gawai (pre-Christian rituals) ceremonies.
Place
SE Asia Borneo; Malaysia; Sarawak; Penrissen; Kampung Benuk [Kampung Segu Bunuk]
Cultural Affliation
Bidayuh [historically Land Dayak]
Named Person
Otor anak Sunjam; Sumuk Nuong (Sajon)
Photographer
?Paka anak Otor
Collector / Expedition
Paka anak Otor
Date
circa 1965 - 1978
Collection Name
Paka anak Otor Collection
Source
Paka anak OtorChua, Liana
Format
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
Source: A selection of 185 prints from Paka anak Otor’s larger collection of approximately 500 prints was made by Liana Chua during fieldwork in Kampung Benuk, Sarawak, Malaysia, in 2005. The purchase of non-exclusive reproduction rights [RM 1845, £250] by the Museum to the family of Paka anak Otor [82 Kampung Benuk, Jalan Puncak Borneo, Kuching 93250, Sarawak, Malaysia], and digital copy photographs of the collection [RM 869, £125] were paid for by the Museum Acquisition Fund [£250] and part of a Crowther-Beynon grant [£125] for the collecting of Sarawak objects. The digital scans were made by Fung Huang Colour Photo Centre [153 Padungan Road, Kuching, Sarawak] in 2005. [Liana Chua 2/8/2007]
Objects: Many of the items in this photograph were heirlooms or as gifts from visitors who had been arriving in Kampung Benuk since the 1950s and 1960s. They eventually became part of what is now Paka’s mini-museum, a collection of heirlooms, ritual objects, local artefacts and objects left by previous tourists. The collection was originally displayed in Otor and Paka’s family home in corners such as these, before filling their ground-floor space, where they remain today. For more information on Paka’s mini-museum, see Chua, Liana. 2006. Antiques and Adat: the changing face of Paka’s mini-museum, Kampung Benuk, Penrissen, Kuching. Institute of East Asian Studies Working Paper No. 11. Kota Samarahan: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak. [Liana Chua 28/8/2007]
Biographical Information: Otor anak Sunjam (d. 1978) was the father of Paka anak Otor, who owned the mini-museum in Kampung Benuk. He was also the village’s tua gawai (ritual chief), and often played host to visitors from the British, Australian and American navies, dignitaries, tourists and government officials. [Liana Chua 2/8/2007]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Liana Chua 28/8/2007]
FM:236619
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