The Orchid Society of PNG proudly presents Past and Living Art at the Grand Hall-National Parliament on July 25 and 26, from 9am to 5pm both days.
K1 for adults and children under 12 free.
The Orchid Society of PNG proudly presents Past and Living Art at the Grand Hall-National Parliament on July 25 and 26, from 9am to 5pm both days.
K1 for adults and children under 12 free.
BIHINDRAH Investment Limited brings to you the Bilum Wear Fashion Show and arts and crafts show at the Ela Beach Hotel on July 18 from 6-10pm at K75 per person (includes food and drinks).
For tickets and more details, contact Sharon Sijam on 7686 5992 or Michaeline Bauso on 7630 3525.
Spend some quality time with the kids/family and even that special someone and the Moresby Arts Theatre and have a fun arvo, watching the latest and the greatest movies on Saturday, June 27 from 1pm to 6pm.
BBQ and drinks on sale.
Call 72116616 or 72165042 for tickets.
By JEFF WALL in League Unlimited
The death occurred in
He also held the distinction of being the first rugby league official in the world – and I suspect still the only – to be knighted for his service to rugby league. He was knighted by the PNG Government in 1991 and had earlier been awarded the OBE.
He became first President of the PNG Rugby League in 1964 when the then ARL and NSWRL President, Bill Buckley, asked him to take the reins of the game in pre-independence
During his time as President, PNG became a Member of the International Rugby League Board and played regular rest matches against the Kangaroos, Kiwis,
The game prospered under his leadership and cemented its place as the national sport of
For the best part of a quarter of a century he led “pilgrimages” of league fans from PNG to the grand final in Sydney.
Apart from his service to rugby league, Sir James Jacobi served for many years as medical officer for PNG’s national airline, Air Niugini. His generosity was legendary. I once estimated that about one in three of the patients who visited his hectic Port Moresby surgery never paid – and they included rugby league players (and officials), missionaries, and hundreds of Papua New Guineans who could not afford to pay....and even some who could.
After moving to
He was born in
I knew Jim Jacobi well for more than 30 years. I was privileged to count him as a close friend. When I first went to work in PNG in 1977, the then QRL Chairman, Senator Ron McAuliffe, made sure I met Jim and it was a matter of months before he had me involved in administration in the game in PNG.
He was a person of unbounded generosity, and his passion for rugby league – and the time he put into it despite seeing up to 60 patients a day in his medical practice – was inspirational.
Rugby league in Papua New Guinea today would be the strong national sport it is today without his leadership and commitment in the challenging early years, and then the period when it entered the international arena.
His passing will not only cause sadness in rugby league in Papua New Guinea – he will be greatly missed by the nation’s political and community leaders, and the countless thousands of Papua New Guineans who benefited from his generosity over the best part of forty years.
From The National,
THE first confirmed case of influenza A (H1N1), or swine flu, in the country, which was reported last week, has successfully completed the quarantine and treatment stage.
The person was fully recovered at home after being hit with a mild level of the swine flu, national health surveillance said last Friday.
Six of the person’s family members had also been quarantined at home at the same time the person was under surveillance, it said.
More tests would be done if they showed flu-like symptoms, it said.
The national health surveillance on influenza A (H1N1) said yesterday it had not confirmed possible new cases among passengers and flight crew of the flight that the person was on.
However, the investigation was continuing with the airline authorities, it said.
It said media reports last week had given misleading figures about swine flu cases.
It said that, according to national health surveillance figures, 16 cases had been recorded: One positive (cleared), 12 negative and three were pending results from
This, however, did not include three reported suspected cases detected at the Pacific International Hospital (PIH) on Saturday, which the hospital revealed yesterday.
The PIH said in a press conference it had quarantined the three suspected cases.
Medical Society of Papua New Guinea president Dr Mathias Sapuri confirmed this yesterday, saying the three people had reportedly come from
World Health Organisation PNG office chief Dr Eigil Sorensen said last Friday the country had a stockpile of 61,000 adult courses of the Tamiflu drug, which was sufficient for now.
A Tamiflu adult course is for 75mg tablets to be taken twice daily for five days.
Dr Sorensen urged the public to remain calm but be highly vigilant, now that the normal flu season was here.
Yesterday, The National was unsuccessful in attempts to get the Department of Transport and Civil Aviation authorities to comment on how soon the country would have thermal cameras to screen overseas passengers at relevant points of entry.
My name is Prisca Chant (pictured above, centre, with Mekeo dancers from Papua New Guinea in Cairns) and I’m from Tahiti which is the main
Today, my talk will be based on my Master’s dissertation entitled ‘Pacific Diaspora and Contemporary Pacific Art in Cairns’. This talk focuses on the Pacific diaspora in
I spent one month in
It was important in my study to take into account the Pacific Islanders’ ‘First Voice’. As a matter of fact, Pacific communities and artists are well-placed to understand their own needs as they are the holders and keepers of their cultural heritage. Giving a voice to the Pacific Islanders has therefore been crucial in my project as it is only through the Pacific Islanders’ self-empowerment that sustainability of their arts and cultural heritage can be achieved.
I believe this topic is timely and relevant today because
I hope that at the end of this talk you will have a better understanding of the importance of arts in the context of sustainable heritage preservation and development for the Pacific cultures here in
A large population of Pacific Islanders currently live in
The Papua New Guineans represent the largest Pacific migrant population in
Overview of 3 Pacific associations in Cairns/community profile
While I was in
Pacific Diaspora Experience
The majority of Pacific Islanders interviewed stated they were attracted to Cairns because of the tropical weather, the island food, the coconut trees, the friendliness of people, the peacefulness and reasonable size of the city and, for some of them, because they already had family living there. All in all, they feel a sense of place and belonging in
In fact, all cultures are ‘constantly in flux, both shaping and being shaped by social and economic aspects of human interaction’ (Rao and Walton 4). Now that Pacific Islanders are living in
In fact, culture and sense of identity are not fixed entities anchored in time. Rather, they evolve with time and according to the environment and place in which people live and the various encounters in their lives. As Ang says about the experience of migration:
There is ...no ideal-typical migrant, and it would therefore be unwarranted to collapse this diversity of experiences into a master-narrative of the migrant experience when the question of ‘where you’re from’ threatens to overwhelm the reality of ‘where you’re at’, the idea of diaspora becomes a disempowering one, a hindrance to ‘identity rather than an enabling principle’ (Ang, qtd. in Gunew 9)
I think that this principle of ‘where you’re at?’ should also be considered in relation to Pacific art practices. The stereotypical views, instilled by the West, of the Pacific region and its arts is still pervasive today. This must be demystified as
The main Stereotypical views on Pacific Art
Exoticism
The depictions of the
Primitivism
Along side with the pervasive exoticisation of the Pacific, ‘primitivism’ is another term used to describe the art of Oceania as well as of
Traditional /Contemporary
When talking about Pacific art, the binary opposition between ‘traditional’ and ‘contemporary’ is a recurrent issue. In the eyes of outsiders, ‘the art of the Pacific has always been traditional rather than contemporary’ (Thomas
Art mirrors the changes in society and as ‘societies change, and so must their arts, if they are to be meaningful, functional and express the sentiment inherent in that society’ (Tausie viii). Pacific Islanders must look forward to forge their identity and arts as part of the contemporary world and this does not mean denying heritage and history but, rather, embracing the opportunities that the present offers.
In addition to this, the contemporary Westernization of Pacific art has been often deplored and accused of lacking of authenticity. Pacific artists face a dilemma here - ‘if they produce traditional art, then, it may be out of place in modern society, but if they produce arts which have Western influences, then they may be accused of producing something non-indigenous or non-traditional’ (Tausie 58). But the reality is that, the art of the Pacific region encompasses both customary genres, such as woven fabrics which are still categorised as works of craft rather than art, and cross-cultural works which can be defined as more ‘modern’ as they incorporates Western influences (Thomas, APT 5 27). Both genres are valid and authentic in their own ways and need recognition in the international art world. The art of the Pacific is not only limited to material and tangible art forms but it encompasses an extensive wealth of intangible art production ranging from dances and songs to story telling and poetry. Those cultural practices are inherent to Pacific Islanders’ lives and culture and all these current art forms in the Pacific possess value and validity. ‘Contemporary Pacific art’ therefore refers to all the creative forms of expression currently practiced in this region.
Contemporary Pacific art is, therefore, neither ‘exotic’ nor ‘traditional’ and under no circumstances ‘primitive’. Such stereotypical views of the
Créolisation of Pacific Art
What makes Pacific culture so distinct from other cultures is the dynamic mix of various cultural sources. The history of colonisation, migration and diaspora in the Pacific area brought extensive fluidity among contemporary artists living and working in the region (Chiu 13). Multiple cultural influences have provided a myriad of realities among Pacific artists. It is this vibrant culture that makes possible a dynamic expression in the arts. This process could be defined as the créolisation of Pacific art, which is the encounter of heterogeneous cultural elements creating a new unpredictable and unexpected créole art form.
To give you an example,
The Pacific artists who are now living in
Conclusion
For Pacific artistic and cultural heritage to be sustainable in the long-term in
[1]‘La créolisation est la mise en contact de plusieurs cultures ou au moins de plusieurs éléments de cultures distinctes… avec pour résultante une donnée nouvelle totalement imprévisible.’