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Art of Oceania
Course: Art of Oceania > Unit 1
Lesson 2: Melanesia- Melanesia, an introduction
- Ambum Stone
- Kanak Mourning Mask
- Malangan
- Mask (Buk), Torres Strait, Mabuiag Island
- Bis Poles at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
- The Life of Malagan
- Tin Mweleun, Slit Gong (Atingting kon)
- Slit Gong (Atingting kon)
- Presentation of Fijian mats and tapa cloths to Queen Elizabeth II
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Melanesia, an introduction
The British Museum
To the north and east of Australia lie the islands known as Melanesia. These islands form one of the most culturally complex regions of the entire world, with 1,293 languages spoken across the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, and the island of New Guinea (politically divided into Indonesia’s West Papua Province and the nation of Papua New Guinea).
It is also a region of great antiquity. New Guinea has been settled for around 45,000 years, the Solomon Islands for 35,000 years, and Vanuatu and New Caledonia for about 4,000.
Small scale societies
Throughout Melanesia, people lived in small scale societies often without strong leadership systems. Instead, communities were bound by ties of family and by complex networks of trade and exchange. Trade routes could link distant communities, and trading canoe voyages covered extensive distances. The daily round of food gardening, hunting, and in coastal areas, of fishing, were enriched by many rituals, often involving the production of remarkable objects such as the famous malangan carvings of New Ireland, and body decorations. In general, Melanesians do not worship gods, but acknowledge the spirits and other beings sharing the landscape with them, and their ancestors.
European contact
Europeans first passed by these islands in the late sixteenth century, but sustained contact only began in the mid-nineteenth century. The British Museum collections date back to some of the earliest voyages in this later period of contact. The Museum continues to collect, adding objects which reflect the contemporary development of the three independent nations and two dependent colonies now in the region.
Additional resources
Want to join the conversation?
- iI didn`t know melas is black in greek.I know that black in greek is mavros.Maybe is in old greek?(2 votes)
- Probably. Many words in English have the word "melas" in it - for example, "melancholy," "melanin," and "melanoma."(2 votes)
- What introductory books are recommended on the history and culture of Melanesia?(2 votes)
- Ann Chowning An Introduction to the People and Cultures of Melanesia is old, but comprehensive(2 votes)
- Melanesia introduction should include: languages (1/3 of languages reside there), art/ritual of different areas in PNG, islands, and Irian Jaya, music, gold mining, and farming practices esp. in the highlands - some of the oldest in the world, and historical trade routes as well as cultural practices related to bikman culture and contemporary life. The rich cultural history of Melanesia is very much alive today, existing along with Christianity.(2 votes)
- Who lives on those islands now?(1 vote)
- The Melanesian people live there now. They are one of the three major ethnicities in the Pacific Islands (Melanesian, Micronesian and Polynesian)(2 votes)
- I wounder how they formed the pices I know its wood cutting but how they do it(1 vote)
- I researched a little on your question, and it said that they usually used a large knife, almost like a machete, and they carved with smaller and smaller knives depending on how detailed they wanted it.(2 votes)
- Which has more population; Melanesia, Micronesia, or Polynesia?(1 vote)
- Melanesia, including PNG and West Papua.(2 votes)
- Why is the Malangan mas important?(1 vote)
- You can read about the Malangan mask on Khan Academy in this unit: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-oceania/melanesia/a/malangan(1 vote)
- What spirits do they worship?Like the harvest spirit?(1 vote)