Item details
Item ID
SG1-018
Title Sogeri Cultural Show, Central Province, 1990
Description Various PNG provincial cultural singsing groups performances by students at the Sogeri Secordary School Cultural Show event in Central Province.

The order of provincial groups represented across PNG are:

1. Oro province students (Oro Kaiva) dance group. Mix (male/female) dressed in tapa cloth and tattoo body painting, dance in a circle to the beat of kundu drums. Woman skip danced flapping tapa cloth across their shoulders.

2. Manus province students dance group. Famous Manus Garamut Dance. Dancers dressed in shell beads tied around the heads, arms, legs, ankles and skip dance on alternate legs to the beat of the garamut drum. Garamut drum made from hollowed log.

3. Central province students dance group. Central province dance group featuring a Mekeo chief headdress. It is one of the most famous and colorful dance presentation by any tribe and or province in the Southern Region.

4. West New Britain Students dance group. Featuring Libung Dance by only male Students dancers. Dancers form two lines of ten to 12 pairs and wear laplaps and a bilas headdress.

5. Western province students dance group. A Kiwai mix male/female dance. Dancers form two or more lines clap and dance. A whistle is use by the lead dancers to signal change in the dance position the dancers need to follower next. Quite an interesting dance as it’s based on living creatures, birds, fish, animals, etc..

6. Buka Students dance group. Buka bamboo flute dance performed by both male and female dancers. The male dancers blow the bamboo flutes and the female dancers dance with fans made out of pandanus leaves in one hand and one hand on the hip.

7. Madang Students dance group. A mix male/female dance. Dancers dressed in traditional ceremony attire, which include a hood headdress that male dancers wear. The dance is the most common in the province. Men stand in the middle beating kundu drums and the women dance in pairs holding hands circling the men.

8. East New Britain dance group. Libung Dance from the Tolai tribe featuring male students dressed in red laplap and headdress called kagal. The dancers form two lines and in pairs, dancing to the beating of bamboo.

9. Miline Bay province students dance group. One of PNG most popular cultural dance, the famous Miline Bay Trobrian Islands Tapioca dance. The tapioca dance is perform by both male and female and the female dancers dressed up in very colorful mini grass skirts and bare breast. Their male counterparts dress in red malo laplaps. The dance has a very sexy action packed and fun feel to it that teases and pleases crowds everywhere it is perform.

10. Eastern highlands students dance group. Featuring the Asaro Mud Men dance parade. The dancers wear masks made out of mud that depicts human heads look alike of various sizes and perform a walk parade dance around the arena.

(Paul Tevlone, July 2024)
Origination date 1990-08-01
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/SG1/018
URL
Collector
Steven Gagau
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Language as given
Subject language(s)
Content language(s)
Dialect
Region / village Sogeri, Central Province

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Originating university University of Sydney
Operator
Data Categories song
Data Types Sound
Discourse type singing
Roles Various - Anonymous Various - Anonymous : performer
Paul Tevlone : consultant
DOI
Cite as Steven Gagau (collector), Various - Anonymous Various - Anonymous (performer), Paul Tevlone (consultant), 1990. Sogeri Cultural Show, Central Province, 1990. X-MATROSKA/MP4. SG1-018 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. http://catalog.paradisec.org.au/collections/SG1/items/018
Content Files (2)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
SG1-018-01.mkv video/x-matroska 6.7 GB 00:23:33.839
SG1-018-01.mp4 video/mp4 897 MB 00:23:33.849
2 files -- 7.57 GB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID SG1
Collection title Sulka Pomio Culture Recordings
Description Since 2014, I have been visiting Kilalum village, a rural coastal community along the south coast in the Wide Bay area of East Pomio in the Pomio District of East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea. The village and surrounding areas is occupied by the Kaimun clan of the Sulka Tribe, one of the ethnic Papuan language groups on New Britain Island surrounded by other Austronesian language groups on the island. In the subsequent years, I became interested and got motivated by the conversations about culture preservation with the Chief and traditional leader of the Kaimun clan and its group of elders within its sub-clans of the Sulka Tribe who live in the Wide Bay region along the south eastern coastline of the Province. The Sulka tribe occupies an area located in between other ethnic tribal groups called the “Mengens” to the south, the “Bainings” to the north and the “Tomoip” to the west inland areas. The Sulka tribe is made up of two (2) mother clans being Kaimun clan and the other as the Masra clan with Kaimun as the biggest clan in terms of population and area coverage. The Kaimun Clan leadership had started an initiative before I made contact with them to undertake a study or a documentation project in their attempt and effort driven by their desire for the cultural preservation and maintenance for intergenerational knowledge sharing and transfer within the Sulka tribe and its various clans. The primary focus was on the history of where the Sulka tribe originated from, how they settled and migrated to where they are today, its tribal clans’ structure and social organisation, how its cultural practices and systems, traditions, customs and society practices such as customary laws, rituals and sacred society came to being and the external influences of missionaries and colonisation to the Sulka people. From the 1970s’, there has been mixed collection from various sources of cassette audio and video tapes, photos, textual information of mixed content in traditional stories, history, life histories, traditional and present day customs/culture, missionary and colonisation history, music (song and dance – traditional and contemporary) and other general life or events stories. From the 1970s’, there has been mixed collection from various sources of cassette audio and video tapes, photos, textual materials and interviews of mixed content in traditional stories, history, life histories, traditional and present day customs/culture, missionary and colonisation history, music (song and dance – traditional and contemporary) and other general life or events stories. This collection is a contribution towards the preservation of general cultural knowledge of Sulka tribe and efforts to documenting the Kaimun clan.
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Languages To view related information on a language, click its name
Access Information
Edit access
View/Download access Mae Carroll
Data access conditions Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
Data access narrative
Metadata
RO-Crate Metadata
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