IDNO

LS.109129.TC1


Description

On Catalogue Card: "Australia.
Rain dance.
11 decorated men carrying leaves in their hands." [manuscript in ink]

On Catalogue Card for duplicate print P.358.ACH1: "11 decorated men carrying leaves in their hands. Rain dance."

Frontal portrait of a group of eleven standing Aranda (Arunta) men, decorated with white down on the chest, abdomen, and upper arms. Some men are decorated with white down around the eyes and on the thighs. All men are holding leaves in their hands. The men have full beards and are standing in a landscape of shrubbery and small trees. [WV 4/2/2009]


Place

Oceania Australasia; Australia; Central Australia


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Baldwin Spencer, Walter; or Gillen, Francis James


Collector / Expedition

Baldwin Spencer, Walter; Gillen, Francis James


Date

1894 - 1926


Collection Name

Teaching Slide CollectionHaddon Unmounted Collection


Source

?Haddon, Alfred Cort (Dr)


Format

Lantern Slide Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

Photographer: Note in Baldwin Spencer, W. and F. J. Gillen, 1927, p. xiii states all photos were taken by the authors. [WV 23/1/2009]

Date: It is not clear when exactly this photograph was taken. It was taken during Walter Baldwin Spencer’s expeditions starting in 1894 and ending in 1926. This is how he summarises his research trips:
"In 1894, as Zoologist on the Horn Expedition, I had the opportunity of seeing not only the Lake Amadeus region but the whole of the country drained by the great Finke River, including the wonderful McDonnell Ranges. It was then that I met Mr. F. J. Gillen, my late friend and comrade during many years of work amongst the Central aborigines. In 1895, in company with Mr. P.M. Byrne, then in charge of the telegraph station at Charlotte Waters, I had the good fortune of being able to see the southern part of the interior after a heavy rainfall. This enabled me to study the animal life of a very typical part of Central Australia in a way that it was impossible to do during the dry season that we experienced on the Horn Expedition. In 1896, 1897, and 1898 Mr. Gilled and myself were working amongst the Arunta at Alice Springs and the Urabunna tribe in the Lake Eyre district. Later on, still working amongst the natives, we spent a year, extending from March 1901 to March 1902, in a traverse of the continent from Oodnadatta to Powell Creek and then across, eastwards, to Borraloola at the mouth of the Macarthur River, on the Gulf of Carpentaria. In 1911 I was the leader of a small expedition sent by the Commonwealth Government to make preliminary scientific investigations into conditions in the Northern Territory, and traversed the country from Darwin southwards and then eastwards along the Roper River to the Gulf of Carpentaria. In December 1911, at the request of the Commonwealth Government, I returned for a year to the Territory as Special Commissioner and Chief Protector of Aborigines, which gave me the opportunity of seeing much of the country and of studying the natives under very favourable conditions. In 1923, in company with Dr. L. Keith Ward, the Government Geologist of South Australia, I had the opportunity of traversing again a considerable area of the Macdonnell Ranges, and finally, in 1926, visited Alice Springs in order to revise and extend the earlier work of Mr. Gillen and myself amongst the Arunta people." [WV 16/2/2009]


FM:243779

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