Living Arts and Living Archives
In line with the theme of the articles in this edition, the Oceanic Art Society is also changing. A new and free full digital subscription for everyone Under 30 has been launched.

In line with the theme of the articles in this edition, the Oceanic Art Society is also changing. A new and free full digital subscription for everyone Under 30 has been launched.

September 16, 2024, marked the 50th anniversary of Papua New Guinea’s independence from Australian administration. To commemorate this milestone, the National Archives of Australia embarked on multiple projects connecting our collections to PNG communities both in Australia and overseas.

Carved anthropomorphic figures of Pacific Oceania are known by the general term of tiki. Their place in protohistoric architecture was first recorded in the accounts of explorers, scientific observers and missionaries between 1769 and the 1800s, as new belief systems were being superimposed on island cultures.

You have to travel to the southeast of the island of Taiwan, to Taitung, to see this remarkably up-to-date Museum of Prehistory. But for Oceanic arts, culture and anthropology buffs, it is very much worth the effort.

The title of this book summarises so simply but accurately the contents of this important book that was launched at the Oceanic Art Society’s XIII Forum “Papua New Guinea Art: Past, Present, Future” in Canberra celebrating Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) arts.

Meet Our Members I grew up in Wynyard on the North West coast of Tasmania and spent many happy hours exploring the shoreline at places like Rocky Cape where I …
