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Image Not Available for Tiwi armband with feather tuft by Margaret Munery
Tiwi armband with feather tuft by Margaret Munery
Image Not Available for Tiwi armband with feather tuft by Margaret Munery

Tiwi armband with feather tuft by Margaret Munery

Maker (Deceased)
Date1995
Object number00028986
NameArmband
MediumPandanus, wax, cockatoo feathers
Dimensions300 x 130 mm, 0.015 kg
Copyright© Margaret Munery
ClassificationsClothing and personal items
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection
DescriptionA woven pandanus armband, or pamajini, was made by Tiwi artist Margaret Munery. Armbands such as this are ceremonial and worn by mourners during the Pukumani ceremony. This particular example features tufts of feathers from the white and the red-tailed black cockatoo that are attached to the pandanus band by wax. The use of cockatoo feathers is significant in 'pamajinis' at a Pukumani ceremony as the cockatoo is 'believed to keep a sentinel eye on wayward spirits lost on route to the island of the dead'. red tailed black cockatoo, white cockatoo,HistoryThe Tiwi women are traditionally the makers of ceremonial bands. These armbands (pamajini) and headbands (japalingini) have been traditionally worn by mourners during the Pukumani ceremony in conjunction with body paint. The purpose of this disguise is to confuse the spirit of the deceased so it will not be able to recognise the mourners. Purukapali, the ancestral being who gave the Tiwi the Pukumani ceremony at the time of creation, decreed that the Tiwi wear these mourning bands. The Pukumani ceremony is still unique and central to modern Tiwi culture. It involves the placing of burial poles or 'Tutuni" on the deceased’s grave along with traditional songs and dances. Tiwi belief is that the first Pukumani ceremony was held by their ancestor Purukuparli for his child, Jinani, and the ceremony was necessary to ensure the deceased entered the spirit world.Significance“The Tiwi regard the Pukumani as the most important ceremony in a person’s life in the world of the living, and even though the Mobuditi (spirit of one dead) has been released, the person’s existence in the living world is not finished until the completion of the ceremony. To the Tiwi the entire focus of the ceremony is on the person now in the grave. This attitude results in the consistent variations in cast and script”. (Goodale, J. ‘Tiwi Wives’, University of Washington Press. 1971)