Old Iare Village, Purari Delta, Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea, Melanesia
Accession Date:
17 May 2017
Collection Date:
21 Mar 2010
Notes:
Small multicolored basketry bag. Twill weave, with stripe and diamond pattern, in beige (undyed), purple, green, and yellow. Single braided handle. No fringe.
Donor notes: [Purchased for] 5 Kina... Oblong plated basket made of shredded dyed sago leaves. This basket has no sago tassels hanging from mouth of basket. The basket has been dyed with an array of store bought dyes: green, purple, and yellow. The handle consists of 2 plaits tied together and a third that is not tied made of shredded dyed sago leaves. The basket's design consists of 3 registers: (1) “ropo” (stars), (2) a design called “Piri Kai” (no translation) which consists of a series of vertical lines, and (3) ) a design called “Poro” (no translation) which consists of a series of horizontal lines. This basket was made by Margaret Ove (age 20; Oreika clan, Lavi Kaupara, Old Iare village) for sale at Muru, which is an Elema village to the east that people of Old Iare go to for market and to buy supplies. She learned how to make akeke from her grandmother. The akeke is woven from dyed and non-dyed fibers obtained from the leaves of a sago palm. The palm frond is first cut and the leaves stripped into fibers. Only young green leaves are used. The strips are then placed in the sun to dry for one day. The fibers are then pulled off the palm frond's stem and dyed. Once the fibers are dyed they are gathered and a knot made, which the weaver holds between her toes as she weaves the bag. Weaving time takes any where between 2 days to 1 week, depending on the time the weaver devotes to the bag.he weaving around the bag's opening is called aimai epo (“making it lips”). The handle's are plaited (nomoro, handle) separately from the same fibers and then woven to the bag on either side of the bag's mouth. Worn by women or men on the forehead, with the bag hanging behind the wearer's back or around the neck resting on the chest, akeke generally are used to hold betelnut, tobacco and other personal items. Regardless of the type of akeke, women only make them.