Hand stencils and communal history: A case study from Auwim, East Sepik, Papua New Guinea

Author:

Tsang Roxanne1ORCID,Katuk Sebastien2,May Sally K.3ORCID,Taçon Paul S.C.4ORCID,Ricaut François‐Xavier5ORCID,Leavesley Matthew G.67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Humanities, Languages and Social Science, Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit and Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Gold Coast campus Griffith University Queensland Australia

2. Auwim Village, Upper Karawari‐Arafundi Region East Sepik Province Papua New Guinea

3. School of Humanities, The University of Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research and Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution Gold Coast campus, Griffith University Queensland Australia

5. Laboratoire Évolution et Diversité Biologique (EDB Science UMR 5174) Université de Toulouse Midi‐Pyrénées, CNRS, IRD, UPS Toulouse France

6. Archaeology, School of Humanities, Languages and Social Science University of Papua New Guinea Port Moresby Papua New Guinea

7. College of Arts, Society & Education, James Cook University Cairns Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTHand stencils directly represent modern humans in landscape settings around the world. Yet their social and cultural contexts are often overlooked due to the lack of ethnography associated with the artwork. This paper explores the hand stencils from Kundumbue and Pundimbung rock art sites, situated in the traditional boundaries of the Auwim people in the East Sepik Province of Papua New Guinea. Combining archaeological rock art analysis with ethnographic knowledge, we demonstrate that the hand stencils are a priority in each clan's place‐making practices, around which they construct the community's social narratives. Rock shelters and their rock art also show a form of communal history that is evoked through their production in contemporary settings, in addition to having been a form of esoteric magic in the past. We conclude that hand stencils can have multiple meanings over time and across space as a widespread cultural marker. However, aspects of the identities of individuals, groups and communities who created the now static hand imagery, remain in place.

Funder

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology

Reference81 articles.

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3. Pleistocene cave art from Sulawesi, Indonesia

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