Contemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in present-day settings provide important insights into rock art practices in the past and present. These traditions can still be seen today in places such as Africa, South America, Australia and Papua New Guinea (PNG). In PNG’s East Sepik region, rock art stencils are still produced by the Auwim people of the Upper Karawari-Arafundi region. This paper presents a case study from Apuranga rock art site in Auwim village, East Sepik, where Auwim artists created stencils during a period of archaeological research in June 2018. Interviews with the Auwim artists revealed the stencils were made to transform a once-feared rockshelter into a place that the community could us...
Western Arnhem Land, in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory, has a rich archaeological lan...
Gambar cadas di Indonesia mulai diteliti sejak sebelum abad 20. Sejumlah publikasi ilmiah sebelumnya...
Members of the Papuan Past Project published a new article in the Journal of Island and Coastal Arch...
International audienceContemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in...
Since 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists, archaeologists, and others have identified evidence of...
Since 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists, archaeologists, and others have identified evidence of...
International audienceSince 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists and archaeologists have identifie...
International audienceHand stencils directly represent modern humans in landscape settings around th...
This article explores the affectual and relational contexts in which rock art is embedded through an...
The Kimberley region of Western Australia is one of the largest and most diverse rock art provenance...
International audienceCassowaries (Casuarius) are one of the largest indigenous animal species of Ne...
The Upper Nepean River catchment in the Sydney Basin has a rich repertoire of visual imagery - rock-...
This thesis focuses on rock art paintings from western Arnhem Land and, specifically, those dep...
Australia has one of the largest inventories of rock art in the world with pictographs and petroglyp...
An extensive body of engraved rock art on the Great Papuan Plateau is documented here for the first ...
Western Arnhem Land, in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory, has a rich archaeological lan...
Gambar cadas di Indonesia mulai diteliti sejak sebelum abad 20. Sejumlah publikasi ilmiah sebelumnya...
Members of the Papuan Past Project published a new article in the Journal of Island and Coastal Arch...
International audienceContemporary narratives and interpretations surrounding rock art production in...
Since 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists, archaeologists, and others have identified evidence of...
Since 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists, archaeologists, and others have identified evidence of...
International audienceSince 1909, patrol officers, anthropologists and archaeologists have identifie...
International audienceHand stencils directly represent modern humans in landscape settings around th...
This article explores the affectual and relational contexts in which rock art is embedded through an...
The Kimberley region of Western Australia is one of the largest and most diverse rock art provenance...
International audienceCassowaries (Casuarius) are one of the largest indigenous animal species of Ne...
The Upper Nepean River catchment in the Sydney Basin has a rich repertoire of visual imagery - rock-...
This thesis focuses on rock art paintings from western Arnhem Land and, specifically, those dep...
Australia has one of the largest inventories of rock art in the world with pictographs and petroglyp...
An extensive body of engraved rock art on the Great Papuan Plateau is documented here for the first ...
Western Arnhem Land, in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory, has a rich archaeological lan...
Gambar cadas di Indonesia mulai diteliti sejak sebelum abad 20. Sejumlah publikasi ilmiah sebelumnya...
Members of the Papuan Past Project published a new article in the Journal of Island and Coastal Arch...