ETHOC 028273

contenant funéraire dupun

Back to results
028273
Dupun hollow log coffins
Australia, Arnhem Land
Yolngu. Mid 20th century
Wood, pigments. H 89,5 cm, Ø 17,5 cm
Gift of Georges Barbey in 1960
MEG Inv. ETHOC 028273
Geolocate the object
The Yolngu funeral ritual required the bones of the deceased to be collected several months after death and laid in a hollow log. This was then painted with the main patterns of the dead person's clan, so that he would be able to return to his clan's spiritual reservoir. At the end of the ceremony closing the funerary cycle, the painted dupun was set upright and abandoned to the elements.

The image above is subject to copyright.
Copyrights for Photographic Reproduction

Registres d'inventaires historiques

Les feuillets numérisés des registres d'inventaires historiques sont soumise à un copyright.
Droits de reproduction photographique

Copie dactylographiée en 13 volumes de l'Inventaire original MEG manuscrit
Registres_inventaire_dactylographie/1743.pdf

Registre d'inventaire original - non indexé
Registres_inventaire_original/Registre_12_027447_028521.pdf

 

Australian Aborigines

In the nineteenth century, the Aborigines were classed as the most primitive people on Earth. Not practising agriculture, animal husbandry, metallurgy or weaving, these hunters-gatherers were considered to have no artistic sensibility. Later, anthropological field work showed that this was not the case and revealed refined, sophisticated cultures.

Painting tells us who we are

The Aborigines tell that long ago, in the Dreamtime, mythical beings rose out of the depths of the land, which was still undifferentiated. As they travelled, they left their traces behind them and their actions shaped the landscape and the sky. They named places and animals, separated animals from humans and instituted the laws governing their society.

In Arnhem Land, painting – whether it is on rock walls, carved objects, bark or the bodies of people taking part in rituals – is evidence of the close link between the Aborigines and the ancestral beings. It expresses their attachment to the land, their world view and their identity.


© 2021 Musée d'ethnographie, Genève