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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Papua New Guinea to be celebrated in London art exhibition

Caption: British contemporary artist Jeremy Millar (left) and a village chief in a recent visit to the Trobriand Islands, Milne Bay Province. Picture courtesy of Jeremy Millar

Port Moresby, Goroka and the Trobriand Islands are to be celebrated in an art exhibition in the United Kingdom in September.
The UK National Maritime Museum (NMM) will host a newly-commissioned artwork by British contemporary artist Jeremy Millar in Greenwich, London from September 24 to January 17 next year.
The exhibition, titled “Given”, takes as its starting point the pioneering work in the Trobriand Islands of the late world-renowned Polish anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski.
Dr Malinowski revolutionised modern anthropology and introduced new ethnographic fieldwork methods through “participant observation” during his two visits to the islands of Milne Bay in 1915-16 and 1917-1918.
One of his most acclaimed works from his fieldtrips was his literary classic Argonauts of the Western Pacific (1922). It was based on his observations of an ancient inter-island trade known as Kula between islanders from the Trobriands and those living between and on the main islands of Woodlark, Fergusson, Normanby and Misima.  
Dr Malinowski’s first journey from Europe to PNG took place by sea, with him leaving on June 9, 1914, via Adelaide, Australia.
 When he set off from England his childhood friend, artist and playwright Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz – who was to be his official photographer – accompanied him.
 However, following a quarrel they parted company and although he never made it to PNG, Witkiewicz set a play in PNG.
Mr Millar is interested in imagining what images might have been produced on this trip had Witkiewicz stayed.
His project will stage, with the Goroka-based Raun Raun theatre troupe, Witkiewicz’s play which will be filmed and exhibited at the NMM alongside a series of photographs produced on the Trobriand Islands.
British High Commissioner to Papua New Guinea, David Dunn, said Mr Millar has exhibited widely in the UK and internationally and authored a number of books.
“Jeremy's work on Dr Malinowski will showcase the Trobriand Islands and Papua New Guinea in the UK and globally, confirming PNG as the world’s most culturally-diverse nation which continues to attract the eye of academia since the time of Dr Malinowski,” said High Commissioner Dunn.
“The London exhibition is a great combination of young UK artistic talent and amazing PNG culture and history and will be a world class platform upon which to highlight to a European and global audience the depth and diversity of PNG.” he added.
 

 More information on the UK National Maritime Museum (NMM) can be obtained from its website http://www.nmm.ac.uk/

 

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