Skip to main content
Image Not Available for Lid for fish trap
Lid for fish trap
Image Not Available for Lid for fish trap

Lid for fish trap

Maker (1961)
Date1991
Object number00015581
NameTrap
MediumPaperbark
DimensionsOverall: 300 x 65 mm, 0.05 kg
ClassificationsTools and equipment
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA lid for a fish trap made by Lena Yaringura (Language: Rembarrnga) of Borlkjam, Northern Territory. This paperbark lid is for a small fish trap used for collecting young fish (00015580). To the people living around Maningrida, the making of woven objects was once a very important occupation. Nowadays most residents have no need of these traditional objects, however, but there is communal pride in making them. Some objects are made for personal use or to give away as presents but most are made to be sold. HistoryThis fish trap lid, collected by Lena Yaringura, is from the Maningrida area. Maningrida settlement is situated on the coast of central Arnhem land at the estuary of the Liverpool River. Many of the people who live in Maningrida and on the surrounding out-stations still use traditional maritime activities as part of their day to day lives, taking advantage of the sea, tidal estuaries and fresh water rivers to collect food. In late 1990 the Australian National Maritime Museum requested the the arts advisor at Maningrida to coordinate with the Maningrida community to put together a small collection of hunting objects with a maritime theme. The hunting utensils that the community came up with included spears, harpoons, sculptures, traps and baskets. Some objects, like the turtle spear, were commissions from the best maker of that object. All of the Maningrida maritime collection was put together by people who still hunt. These objects are all things that were still being used. These objects, including this fish trap, are part of an culture that has learnt it skills from their ancestors. But the makers as individuals respond to today's needs and the available technology. Hunting equipment was not normally painted but images of fish or freshwater are still painted on rocks near where these things where collected.These images are now sometimes painted on objects and they recall the animal that the hunters are thinking of as they carve, weave or paint the object. Many of the items woven today have their origins at the beginning of time in Maningrida culture. The Gun-matj sacred dilly bag-was one of the Totemic creators of Rembarrng a clan land, creating water-holes and imparting the life force in that place for the people who live there, together with their language, law, song, ceremony, social customs and technology. Both secular and sacred versions of these items are still commonly made by both men and women, though only outside versions are made for sale to a wider market. To the people living around Maningrida, the making of woven objects was once a very important occupation. Nowadays most residents have no need of these traditional objects, however, but there is communal pride in making them. Some objects are made for personal use or to give away as presents but most are made to be sold. SignificanceThis fish trap lid is representative of Indigenous weaving techniques and hunting equipment used in the Northern Territory. It demonstrates the type of utilitarian objects used by men and women when they interact with the sea. Today these functional items are mainly produced for artistic purposes with the Maningrida Art Centre being a well recognised centre for weaving.