Uramat Mugas (Uramat story songs)
Uramat Clan
Papua New Guinea est. 2012
Ruth McDougall, Curator; Lazarus Eposia, Uramat Clan, b.1981, Papua New Guinea (PNG); Tade Boas, Uramat Clan, Ngurhi Family, PNG; Ngari Isaac, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Willie Isaac, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Paul Kivung, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Allan Muvana, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Stanley Robin, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Febuar Samuel, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Paul Sape, Uramat Clan, Mega Family, PNG; Paibe Tagaun, Uramat Clan, Ngoari Family, PNG; Elias Toban, Uramat People, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Febuar Toban, Uramat People, Nguarhi Family, PNG; Levi Togiri, Uramat Clan, Nguarhi Family, PNG
With: Gideon Kakabin, Gunantuna people, 1956–2018, PNG; Judy Kakabin, Gunantuna people, b.1967, PNG; Glegn Burua, Gunantuna people, b.1997, PNG; Garett Low, Gunantuna people, b.1981, PNG; Juan Low, Gunantuna people, b.1978, PNG; Joseph Yass, Uramat Clan, b.1995, PNG; Keith Armstrong, b.1965, United Kingdom/Australia; David Bridie, b.1962, Australia; Joanne Kenny, b.1959, Australia; Andrew Robinson, b.1983, Australia; Harley Coustley, b.1991, Australia
Installation view of Uramat Mugas, featuring masks gifted by the Uramat Clan of Gaulim and Wunga villages in Papua New Guinea at GOMA, Februrary 2022 / Photograph: Brad Wagner, QAGOMA
Uramat Mugas (Uramat Story Songs) 2021 is a collaborative project inspired by the dynamic ceremonial practices of the Uramat families who live in and around the township of Gaulim in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea. The project centres around and seeks to honour this community’s gift in 2018 of more than 70 ceremonial objects to QAGOMA through their interlocutor, the late Gideon Kakabin, and Uramat leader Lazarus Eposia. Exhibiting spectacular sculptural qualities, some of these objects — the iconic Qawat (kavat) and madaska masks — may be known to audiences familiar with museum collections and displays of what is often termed Baining ‘art’. For APT, the Uramat families with whom the Gallery is working have sought to expand beyond existing museum display models to explore and create new contexts to engage audiences with the breadth of their lived culture.
Led by Lazarus Eposia, the group has worked with local videographers and artists Keith Armstrong and David Bridie, as well as staff from QAGOMA and the Queensland University of Technology to develop an immersive installation in which these spiritual entities return virtually to ples (place) via the recorded sounds of Uramat songs, the mesmerising beats of their bamboo orchestra and the sights and sounds of village life. Within the exhibition space, audiences are invited to move through a sequence of events and ceremonies, directed by the speed and the intensity of drumming and singing. Along the way, there are opportunities to engage with groups of the Uramat’s extensive pantheon of spirit figures, the masks that herald their presence and their associated stories.
Uramat Mugas (Uramat Story Songs) is a Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art Project developed for display in 'The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art' with the support of the Indigenous Uramat Identity Group of East New Britain, Papua New Guinea. The project was achieved with the assistance of Queensland University of Technology Creative Industries and supported by the Australian Government through the Australian Cultural Diplomacy Grants Program.
KAKABIN, Gideon
1956
- 2018
Full profile for KAKABIN, Gideon