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  • A black human-like head with pronounced jaw, elongated head and white designs that replicate facial paint or tattoo markings presented with the words Arts of Oceania with a blue background.

Kavat (masks)

#1735

Kairak Baining artists

1972–73

Bamboo, bark cloth, paint

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Kavat are constructed from a rigid framework of split bamboo lined with a layer of leaves and wrapped in a “skin” of bark cloth. Each kavat is unique, its imposing form and dynamic motifs designed to embody an entity in the natural world. Named motifs include the triangular goer (the spirit’s tears) and kotmaku (animal tracks in the sand or the slithering form of a snake); cross sections of rengit seeds, believed to have curative powers, are another popular design. All masks have a pair of sohong (staring eyes) and repeating geometrical motifs in red and black, some applied with felt-tipped markers. These outlines play against the negative space of the natural bark surfaces, animated by the crackling fires and the movements of the masked dancers during performances that last through the night.

1735. Kavat (masks), Kairak Baining artists

Wylda Bayrón

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Qhuas
Gift of George and Sarah Corbin, 2005
Tus lej nkag
2005.460.1, .2; 2004.552.1

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