IDNO
DG.102042.PAO
Description
A large group of villagers gathers at the longhouse at Kampung Benuk, watching as a young woman, Jingum, dances with a ?European male visitor in front of them.
Jingum wears a patterned long blouse over a sarong; many other women and girls in the audience wear dresses or blouses and sarongs. The girl in the centre looking upwards at the dancing is Ngang; the boy standing in the right-hand corner with his arms folded is possibly Gonul.
Place
SE Asia Borneo; Malaysia; Sarawak; Penrissen; Kampung Benuk [Kampung Segu Bunuk]
Cultural Affliation
Bidayuh [historically Land Dayak]
Named Person
Jingum; Ngang; ?Gonul
Photographer
None
Collector / Expedition
Paka anak Otor
Date
circa 1966
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]
Context: Kampung Benuk has been a small-scale tourist attraction since the 1960s, being particularly famous for its longhouse. Its first visitors were often members of the British, Australian and American armed forces stationed nearby during the Confrontation years between Indonesia and Malaysia (1963-1966); later visitors included civilian tourists, foreign dignitaries, UNESCO representatives, film crews, and government officials. It was common for such visitors to take part in large village-wide feasts and ceremonies, which often involved music and dancing.
Benuk’s visitor numbers appear to have peaked around the 1970s and 1980s, especially with increasing domestic and Asian tourism and the state government’s tourist promotion efforts. Today it remains a fairly popular attraction despite its much diminished longhouse. [Liana Chua 10/9/2007]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Liana Chua 10/9/2007]
FM:236692
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