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Art and Creativity in a New Guinea Society
The Kwoma in Cross-Cultural Perspective
Art and Creativity in a New Guinea Society
The Kwoma in Cross-Cultural Perspective
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Description
This book explores the Kwoma of Papua New Guinea's Sepik River region-creators of some of the Pacific's most distinctive visual art.
Through case studies of painting, sculpture, architecture, and ritual, Ross Bowden reveals how the Kwoma understand art as a cultural phenomenon: its spiritual origins, standards of quality, and notions of creativity. Their beliefs are contrasted with the modern Western concept of art, which emerged not in the Enlightenment, as often assumed, but centuries earlier during the Renaissance. Bowden traces the radical cultural shifts in Europe between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries that redefined human creativity and gave rise to an idea of art that still shapes Western thought today, contrasting this development with the form and function of Kwoma creativity.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Sources of Creativity in Art
Chapter 2: The Supernatural Origins of Men's Houses and Their Art
Chapter 3: The Supernatural Origins of Kwoma Ritual
Chapter 4: Cultural Implications of Kwoma Notions of Creativity in Art
Chapter 5: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
Chapter 6: Related Issues
References
Index
About the Author
Product details
| Published | Jan 29 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Paperback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 182 |
| ISBN | 9781793611383 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Illustrations | 1 b/w illustration; 33 b/w photos |
| Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Art and Creativity in a New Guinea Society: The Kwoma in Cross-Cultural Perspective is an exciting journey to the artistic world of the Kwoma in the Sepik River Region of Papua New Guinea. Drawing on thirty-five years of studying and communicating with the Kwoma, Ross Bowden introduces readers to lavishly painted Men's Houses and the rituals held there. His research serves as a starting point for a detailed and fascinating cross-cultural exploration of abstract and non-abstract approaches to art, and has resulted in an outstanding work on the material expression of Sepik creativity set against the background of international art.
Brigitta Hauser-Schäublin, University of Göttingen
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Ross Bowden's long-term research on the cultural and ritual context of the paintings, sculptures and architecture of the Kwoma is presented in clear, non-technical language which argues that the Kwoma and similar societies 'locate the sources of creativity outside the individual in the supernatural world.' In a masterful survey of art history, Bowden contrasts this with 'those societies that attribute creativity in art to individuals.' This work has profound implications for the understanding and writing of cross-cultural research on art.
Barry Craig, formerly Senior Curator of Foreign Ethnology, South Australian Museum
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Ross Bowden presents a deeper cultural perspective on the role of the artist and creativity by challenging us to consider sources of inspiration that come from creation itself. Drawing on insights from the Kwoma, a society that has had the isolation, time, and introspection necessary to conceive of an alternate perspective on reality, this work allows us to appreciate and contrast diverse modes of consciousness.
Jerome Feldman, Hawai'i Pacific University
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This book really is a "must read" for those of us whose interest in Oceanic or any other kind of Indigenous art is primarily aesthetic and not underpinned by much, if any, anthropological or arthistory expertise. Ross Bowden has done many years of academic research and has returned several times, over a period of more than three decades, to the remote Bangwis village, a Kwoma language-group community in the middle Sepik River region of Papua New Guinea. By virtue of his Kwoma language skills, he has learned from the local people about the sources of inspiration of their visual arts, including painting, architecture, ritual dancing and statues.
The Oceanic Art Society Journal
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The argument and illustrative material in this fascinating book are intriguingly dual: in the first place, specifically ethnographically local, in the second, speculatively near global. In short, this book is both an authoritative ethnographic report and a proposal for a major world art research project. After more than thirty years, Bowden's Kwoma fieldwork may be done, but may the major new research he proposes be further theorized and designed. Let it commence.
Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute





















