Showing 14 items matching "moieties"
-
Clunes MuseumDocument - RECEIPT BOOK
... SMALL GREY COVERED RECEIPT BOOK - FIRST MOIETY - SPECIAL RATE 1874-5 BOROUGH OF CLUNES...Clunes Museum 36 Fraser Street enter building through Collins Place Clunes goldfields RECEIPT BOOK ISSUED BY BOROUGH OF CLUNES local history commerce book keeping hepburn shire SMALL GREY COVERED RECEIPT BOOK - FIRST MOIETY - SPECIAL RATE 1874-5 BOROUGH OF CLUNES Document RECEIPT BOOK ...RECEIPT BOOK ISSUED BY BOROUGH OF CLUNESSMALL GREY COVERED RECEIPT BOOK - FIRST MOIETY - SPECIAL RATE 1874-5 BOROUGH OF CLUNESlocal history, commerce, book keeping, hepburn shire -
Clunes MuseumDocument - RECEIPT BOOK
... RECEIPT BOOK - NOTICES - SECOND MOIETY 1874 - 75 NO.4 BOROUGH CLUNES - SPECIAL RATE 1874 - 5. ...Clunes Museum 36 Fraser Street enter building through Collins Place Clunes goldfields RECEIPT BOOK ISSUED BY BOROUGH OF CLUNES 1874 - 75 local history commerce book keeping hepburn shire book keeping RECEIPT BOOK - NOTICES - SECOND MOIETY 1874 - 75 NO.4 BOROUGH CLUNES - SPECIAL RATE 1874 - 5. ...RECEIPT BOOK ISSUED BY BOROUGH OF CLUNES 1874 - 75RECEIPT BOOK - NOTICES - SECOND MOIETY 1874 - 75 NO.4 BOROUGH CLUNES - SPECIAL RATE 1874 - 5. RECEIPT NO. 302 - 400.local history, commerce, book keeping, hepburn shire book keeping -
Clunes MuseumDocument - CLUNES WATER COMMISSION
... BOOKLET OF REMINDER NOTICES OF WATER RATES FOR 1892 ONLY A FEW ARE USED THE NOTICES ARE PRINTEDPM RED PAPER PM TJE CPVER: NO 7 BOOK NOTICES WATER RATES 1882 - 1ST AND 2ND MOIETY (HANDWRITTEN)...Clunes Museum 36 Fraser Street enter building through Collins Place Clunes goldfields WATER RATES CLUNES WATER COMMISSIONER ON COVER ROUND STICKER WITH"9" BOOKLET OF REMINDER NOTICES OF WATER RATES FOR 1892 ONLY A FEW ARE USED THE NOTICES ARE PRINTEDPM RED PAPER PM TJE CPVER: NO 7 BOOK NOTICES WATER RATES 1882 - 1ST AND 2ND MOIETY (HANDWRITTEN) Document CLUNES WATER COMMISSION ...BOOKLET OF REMINDER NOTICES OF WATER RATES FOR 1892 ONLY A FEW ARE USED THE NOTICES ARE PRINTEDPM RED PAPER PM TJE CPVER: NO 7 BOOK NOTICES WATER RATES 1882 - 1ST AND 2ND MOIETY (HANDWRITTEN)ON COVER ROUND STICKER WITH"9"water rates, clunes water commissioner -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Bill Jonas et al, The little red, yellow &? black (and green and blue and white) book : a short guide to Indigenous Australia, 1994
... moieties...Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 33 Saxon Street Brunswick melbourne moieties reconciliation land rights Mabo b&w photographs, colour photographs A short guide to the history, lives and culture of the First Australians, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. ...A short guide to the history, lives and culture of the First Australians, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.b&w photographs, colour photographsmoieties, reconciliation, land rights, mabo -
Federation University Art CollectionPainting - Natural pigment on bark, Mawurndjul, John, 'Female Wayarra Spirit' by John Mawurndjul, 1995
... The artwork is associated with Dilebang, a duwa moiety place that belongs to the Kurulk clan. ...The artwork is associated with Dilebang, a duwa moiety place that belongs to the Kurulk clan. ...Balang [John MAWURNDJUL] (1952 - ) Born Mumeka, Northern Territory Country: Milmilngkan, West Arnham Land, Northern Territory Clan: Na-Kurulk Language Group: Kunwinjku Location: Milmilngkan John Mawurndjul is an Australian indigenous artist. He is a member of the Kuninjku people of West Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. Growing up John had only occasional contact with non-indigenous people and culture. He was tutored in rarrk, a traditional painting technique using fine cross hatching and infill, working on small barks. During the 1980s he started producing larger and more complex works. The artist has painted 'Wayarra', a generic term which can include both malevolent spirit beings which continually inhabit certain sites or objects but can also mean the Spirit of a recently deceased person. These spirits are one of two spirits of the dead, the other being the 'Kun-malng' soul. The 'Wayarra' is the shadow or 'shade' of the dead and may take on the form of the deceased and haunt areas where the deceased recently inhabited. In order to prevent Wayarra spirits from harassing relative of the recently deceased, a smoking ceremont is performed where Ironwood leaves are burnt around the camp of the recently deceased and ochre is rubbed on all objects belonging to the deceased. Ochre may also be rubbed on vehicles, houses and trees. Some Wayarra are a particular Dreaming totem for people of certain clans. This is why many artists depict Wayarra in their bark paintings and sculptures. They are depicting clan totems particular to their lineage and which are celebrated in major regional patrimoiety ceremonies. In 1989 the work of John Mawurndjul was included in the landmark exhibition "Magiciens de la Terra' at the Centre Pompidou and Grande Halle de la Vilette in Paris, France. His works have also been exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Australia, New York, Paris and Japan. Mawurndjul is one of eight artists whose work in part of the largest inernational commission of contemporary Indigenous art from Australia at the Musee du Quai Branly, Paris. The work was exhibited in the Australian survey "John Mawurndjul: I Am The Old And The New", at the Museum of Contemporary Art, one of the 160-odd works all chosen by Mawurndjul for inclusion in the exhibition. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.This artwork was chosen by John Murwurndjul as on of around 160 works for exhibition in the 2018 Australian Survey of his work at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The artist is known for his rarrk work, which is evident in 'Female Wayarra Spirit'.Aboriginal bark painting featurung rarrk. The artwork is associated with Dilebang, a duwa moiety place that belongs to the Kurulk clan. This work is currently on loan for exhibition in 'John Mawurndjul: I am the old and the new'. The exhibition will be shown at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (Sydney) from 6 July – 23 September 2018, and the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide from 26 October 2018 – 28 January 2019.art, artwork, john mawurndjul, aboriginal, bark painting, rarrk, wayarra, kuninjku, maningrida, loan -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesReport, Marie Hansen Fels, These singular people : the Ovens Blacks : supplementary report 28 July 1997, 1997
... ...moieties...Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 33 Saxon Street Brunswick melbourne Waveroo Waywurru Bangerang Taungorung Taungurung George Augustus Robinson moieties Victorian history These singular people : the Ovens Blacks : supplementary report 28 July 1997 Report Marie Hansen Fels ...waveroo, waywurru, bangerang, taungorung, taungurung, george augustus robinson, moieties, victorian history -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Ann E Wells, This their dreaming : legends of the panels of Aboriginal art in the Yirrkala Church, 1971
... Lists the artists for each moiety. Maps show the territory of the people mentioned in the text. ...Lists the artists for each moiety. Maps show the territory of the people mentioned in the text. ...Some time before the end of the year 1962, two great panels of Aboriginal art were begun. They were painted for part of a screen placed behind the Communion table in the Yirrkala church, and represented the two main, creative legends governing the lives, the behaviour and the ritual of the Aborigines belonging to a wide area of northeast Arnhem Land. Gives a brief outline of circumstances surrounding the panels. Lists the artists for each moiety. Maps show the territory of the people mentioned in the text. For each panel, there is a description of each section and an explanation of associated myths. Dua panel - the Djankawu journeys. Yiritja panel - legend of Banaitja. Glossary of terms.b&w art reproductionsyirrkala, yirrkala church, arnhem land -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Meyer Eidelson, The Melbourne dreaming : a guide to the Aboriginal places of Melbourne, 1997
... ...moieties...Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 33 Saxon Street Brunswick melbourne Woi wurrung Wurundjeri Boon wurrung Kulin Yarra Yarra Yarra River Werribee River Bunjil Waa moieties Maribyrnong sacred sites maps, b&w illustrations, colour illustrations, colour photographs, word lists This guide shows Melbourne? ...This guide shows Melbourne?s Aboriginal places so that people using it can gain easy access to and a greater knowledge of them. Important historical events occurred at some of them. Others are Archaeological sites where there are still physical remains of Aboriginal activity before settlement. Locations have been mapped and Melways references and maps are included.maps, b&w illustrations, colour illustrations, colour photographs, word listswoi wurrung, wurundjeri, boon wurrung, kulin, yarra yarra, yarra river, werribee river, bunjil, waa, moieties, maribyrnong, sacred sites -
City of StonningtonNawurapu Wunungmurra, Garraparra, 2013
... All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...Nawurapu Wunungmurra is the eldest son of the late Yaggarriny Wunungmurra, the first Aboriginal artist to have his copyright recognised in an Australian court. From an early age he was trained by his father and assisted him with this painting. Later, as his own spiritual authority increased, he painted in his own right. This pole depicts the sea at Garraparra, a coastal headland and bay area within Mungurru, or Blue Mud Bay. Garraparra has been rendered by the wavy design for Yirritja (deep saltwater) that has many states and connects with the sacred waters coming from the land estates by currents and tidal flow. Garraparra marks the spot of a sacred burial area for the Dhalwangu clan to which Wunungmurra belongs. Sacred songs and dance narrate the heroic adventures of two ancestral hunters who left the shores of Garraparra hunting for turtle. On their journey they passed sacred places and ancestral totems before they came to grief when their canoe capsized. The hunters’ bodies washed back to the shores of Garraparra with the currents and the tides, as the Wangupini, cloud rising from the north, followed with its rain and wind. In the songs, the terns (Gitkit) reel in the breeze around these statuesque clouds on the horizon, and this stylised rendition of clouds seen at the top of this work is the latest motif in Wunungmurra’s ouvre.Ceremonial hollow log poles Arnhem Land, Northern Territory The people of Central and Eastern Arnhem Land refer to themselves collectively as Yolngu, meaning human beings. The Yolngu traditionally use logs naturally hollowed out by termites in a funerary and ceremonial functions, principally as an ossuary. In an Australian contemporary art context however hollow log sculptures are purely memorial in function and made explicitly for public display. In Arnhem Land hollow logs are known as larrakitj; hollow logs known by other names are used in burial practices by a number of Aboriginal peoples in the north of Australia. The logs can also represent the deceased person, as the designs applied are the same as those painted on the body during the burial rites. All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. All such affiliations play a part in Aboriginal artists' inherited right to paint an established set of designs belonging to their social group; this inheritance is, in fact, the artist's copyright over imagery.stonnington contemporary art collection, first peoples, first nations, indigenous, aboriginal torres strait islander, painting, nawurapu wunungmurra, garraparra, coastal, yirritja, saltwater, sacred burial, cultural heritage, cultural identity -
City of StonningtonGunybi Ganambarr, Gangan, 2012
... All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...Gunybi Ganambarr has built a reputation for his innovative techniques, incising and shaping barks and adding materials to traditional art forms. He attributes his confidence in using new materials to his twelve year stint as a part of a building team in remote homelands. Ganambarr primarily lives in his mother’s community at Gangan, which lies north-west of Blue Mud Bay in eastern Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. Ganambarr has absorbed the minutiae and spirituality of place; his paintings can be read as meditations on the specific tracts of land for which he is entitled to speak; in this case, a sacred expanse of water behind the Gangan outstation where this work was produced, referred to as Gulutji. Ganambarr’s designs recount the ancestral formation of the land, the beings that reside within its borders and the seasonal events that nourish its ecosystem. His work exemplifies the confidence and cultural assertion of a new, experimental Yolngu art, while remaining firmly influenced by elders and senior artists. Ceremonial hollow log poles Arnhem Land, Northern Territory The people of Central and Eastern Arnhem Land refer to themselves collectively as Yolngu, meaning human beings. The Yolngu traditionally use logs naturally hollowed out by termites in a funerary and ceremonial functions, principally as an ossuary. In an Australian contemporary art context however hollow log sculptures are purely memorial in function and made explicitly for public display. In Arnhem Land hollow logs are known as larrakitj; hollow logs known by other names are used in burial practices by a number of Aboriginal peoples in the north of Australia. The logs can also represent the deceased person, as the designs applied are the same as those painted on the body during the burial rites. All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. All such affiliations play a part in Aboriginal artists' inherited right to paint an established set of designs belonging to their social group; this inheritance is, in fact, the artist's copyright over imagery. stonnington contemporary art collection, first peoples, first nations, indigenous, aboriginal torres strait islander, painting, gunybi ganambarr, natural environment, cultural heritage, cultural identity, cultural knowledge, landscape -
City of StonningtonMalaluba Gumana, Garrimala, 2014
... All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. ...Malaluba Gumana dedicates most of her artworks to portraying her mother Marratj Gurruwiwi’s Gälpu clan designs of dhatam (waterlilly), djari (rainbow), djaykun (filesnake) and wititj (olive python or rainbow serpent). Gumana demonstrates a very fine ‘marwat’, a cross hatching technique that utilises a fine brush of human hair, applied to bark and memorial poles. The title 'Garrimala' refers to a billabong close to Malaluba’s homeland of Gängan. Dominating this work are realistic representations of dhatam, the waterlily plant. The Gälpu clan miny’tji – the sacred clan design behind the lillies – represents djari (rainbows) and the power of the lightning within them. It also refers to the force of the storm created by the python Wititj, living amongst the waterlilies causing ripples and rainbows on the surface of the water. The dynamic diagonal lines symbolise trees that have been knocked down as Wititj moves from place to place. Ceremonial hollow log poles Arnhem Land, Northern Territory The people of Central and Eastern Arnhem Land refer to themselves collectively as Yolngu, meaning human beings. The Yolngu traditionally use logs naturally hollowed out by termites in a funerary and ceremonial functions, principally as an ossuary. In an Australian contemporary art context however hollow log sculptures are purely memorial in function and made explicitly for public display. In Arnhem Land hollow logs are known as larrakitj; hollow logs known by other names are used in burial practices by a number of Aboriginal peoples in the north of Australia. The logs can also represent the deceased person, as the designs applied are the same as those painted on the body during the burial rites. All Yolngu clans belong to a moiety, one of two complementary halves of society: Dhuwa and Yirritja. All such affiliations play a part in Aboriginal artists' inherited right to paint an established set of designs belonging to their social group; this inheritance is, in fact, the artist's copyright over imagery. stonnington contemporary art collection, first peoples, first nations, indigenous, aboriginal torres strait islander, painting, malaluba gumana, waterlily, rainbow, filesnake, olive python, rainbow serpent, natural environment, cultural heritage -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Sue C Wesson, An overview of the sources for a language and clan atlas of Eastern Victoria and Southern New South Wales, 1994
... ...moieties...Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 33 Saxon Street Brunswick melbourne Woiworung Bunurong Taungurong Ngurai-illam-wurung Bidawal Maap Norman Tindale Diane Barwick Aldo Massola Eve Fesl Ian David Clark George Augustus Robinson Reverend John Bulmer Robert Brough Smyth Alfred William Howitt moieties clan names maps, b&w illustrations, b&w photographs, document reproductions, tables This monograph concerns Eastern Victoria and Southern New South Wales and reviews the ethnographic record available for the study area. ...This monograph concerns Eastern Victoria and Southern New South Wales and reviews the ethnographic record available for the study area. A test case is made of one tribe within the study area which requires further research. Overall, the literature review and the case study demonstrate that the ability to undertake detailed reconstructions, as Clark and Barwick have done for the other regions, can be undertaken in Eastern Victoria and Southern New South Wales, and this model will form the basis of future research.maps, b&w illustrations, b&w photographs, document reproductions, tableswoiworung, bunurong, taungurong, ngurai-illam-wurung, bidawal, maap, norman tindale, diane barwick, aldo massola, eve fesl, ian david clark, george augustus robinson, reverend john bulmer, robert brough smyth, alfred william howitt, moieties, clan names -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Megan Goulding et al, Moreland post-contact Aboriginal heritage study, 2006
... ...moieties...Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 33 Saxon Street Brunswick melbourne Woiworung Woi wurrung Wurundjeri Waa Bunjil Werribee River Port Phillip Mount Baw Baw Great Dividing Range Yarra River Eastern Kulin Gunung willam balluk William Barak John Batman William Thomas Moreland history moieties local history colonisation maps, colour photographs, b&w photographs, tables This study aims to identify Aboriginal heritage sites and landscape associations in the Moreland municipality that date from the pre-contact period through to the early contact period when Europeans settled in and around the area, to the present day. ...This study aims to identify Aboriginal heritage sites and landscape associations in the Moreland municipality that date from the pre-contact period through to the early contact period when Europeans settled in and around the area, to the present day.maps, colour photographs, b&w photographs, tableswoiworung, woi wurrung, wurundjeri, waa, bunjil, werribee river, port phillip, mount baw baw, great dividing range, yarra river, eastern kulin, gunung willam balluk, william barak, john batman, william thomas, moreland history, moieties, local history, colonisation -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for LanguagesBook, Aldo Massola, The Aborigines of south-eastern Australia : as they were, 1971
... naming, reproduces Wembawemba vocabulary, notes use of secret languages, gives 12 rules for pronounciation; p.32-53; Religion, spirit beliefs, totemism, moieties, phratries, marriage rules; mythology, gives eaglehawk &? ...naming, reproduces Wembawemba vocabulary, notes use of secret languages, gives 12 rules for pronounciation; p.32-53; Religion, spirit beliefs, totemism, moieties, phratries, marriage rules; mythology, gives eaglehawk &? ...Contents: p.1-3; Origins, arrival in Australia; p.4-9; How they lived - camp sites, dating (including carbon dating); p.10-27; Physical appearance, skin colour, hair, clothing, body ornaments, cicatrization; exchange system, distribution of food, marriage &? sexual relations; the tribe - structure, relationship to land, territory, gives map showing locations of tribes, New South Wales, Victoria &? eastern South Australia, leadership, government, division of labour, status of women, estimated population at white settlement, density of population (Victoria); p.28-31; Language - names &? naming, reproduces Wembawemba vocabulary, notes use of secret languages, gives 12 rules for pronounciation; p.32-53; Religion, spirit beliefs, totemism, moieties, phratries, marriage rules; mythology, gives eaglehawk &? crow myth from Lake Victoria &? other myths illustrating origins of fire &? natural rock formations, mythical beasts (Bunyip, Mindie), stellar beliefs; magic, medicine men, powers, native remedies for sickness, describes ceremony held in Melbourne, 1847 to avert evil, sorcery, pointing bone, love magic, rain makers; messengers, appearance, etiquette, message sticks; p.54-71; Rock art, motifs, colours, decorative art, engraving of utensils, rock engravings, manufacture &? use of pigments, engraving techniques; trade system, objects bartered, meeting places for trade (Victoria), map shows possible routes (south east Australia); corroborees, purpose, body ornaments &? decorations, musical instruments; p.72-93; Ceremonial life, marriage, punishment for infidelity, birth, childhood, games &? amusements, initiation, etiquette of visiting tribes, details of ceremony, womens role, earth figures &? ground designs, bull roarers, female puberty ceremonies; p.94-133; Shelters, fire making, cooking, construction of canoes, wooden implements, use of reeds, animal skins &? sinews, shells; stone tools, cylindro conical stones, scrapers, knives &? microliths; hunting weapons, spear, other methods pits, nets; fishing methods &? spears, traps; food sharing, womens responsibilities for collecting, digging stick, cooking methods, insect foods, plant foods, water resources; manufacture &? use of spears, spear throwers, shields, clubs, boomerangs; inter- &? intratribal fighting; p.134-147; Death, disposal of body - eating of the dead, burial, cremation, platform exposure, dendroglyphs (N.S.W.), Aboriginal burial grounds (Darling &? Murray Rivers), mourning, widowhood, kopi caps (N.S.W.), causes of death, inquest ceremonies, revenge expedition, after death beliefs; p.148-157; The end of the tribes white settlement &? its impact on Aboriginal life, friction between natives &? settlers, establishment of Protectorates; copiously illustrated throughout.maps, b&w illustrations, b&w photographswemba wemba, murray river, darling river, lake victoria
