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Timbuwarra The ''timbuwarra'', or ''timbuwara'' (tentatively translated as "spirit of the flesh which guards the doors"〔(Figure en vannerie ) at the Collection Barbier-Mueller〕), is a type of ritual figure produced by the Wiru people of the Southern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea. ''Timbuwarra'' figures are generally made of rattan and painted, and may serve several functions, although they are generally held to be associated with fertility rites and with the spirit world.〔(Timbuwarra ) at about NSW〕 Few are known to exist, and their purpose is generally poorly understood.〔 ''Timbuwarra'' are flat, woven, and anthropomorphic.〔 Usually they are made of rattan and painted with ochre pigments in earth tones;〔(Timbuwarra ) at the Tomkins Collection〕〔(Timbuwarra Figures )〕 they may also be further decorated with cassowary feathers and beads.〔 They may sometimes also take the form of animals.〔("Phantom Shields" ) from ''Artnet''〕 The figures are created by elders during times of disaster, such as disease, earthquake, or famine.〔 The uses of the ''timbuwarra'' are varied; they are most often seen as guardian figures outside of ceremonial houses, which are constructed at some distance from the village.〔〔〔 They would sometimes be used in mourning rituals,〔 and have been described as representations of dead women to which respects may be paid by friends and relatives; the status of the women and their manner of death is not known.〔〔 Sometimes, ''timbuwarra'' would also be used during male initiation rites to teach boys about sexual behavior. One collector has recorded:
One of these that I had had two holes down in the abdomen area – one above the other. I was told that this was used to teach the young men which hole to aim for during sex to avoid pregnancy.〔Michael Hamson, quoted at the Tomkins Collection website〕 They were also sometimes carried or worn by village men during fertility rites;〔 when worn, they were often attached to a ceremonial wig in a fashion known locally as "female pinned by a penis to the wig".〔 Once ''timbuwarra'' have outlived their purpose, they are buried to refertilize the earth from which they were formed.〔 A small number, however, have found their way into Western collections in more recent years; an example exists in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, while others are held privately.〔〔 The practice of making them died out with the coming of Catholic missionaries in the 1950s, and few are made today.〔San Saeng No.20 Autumn/Winter 2007 (Leaving Together Helping Each Other ) ISSN 1599-4880〕 ==References==
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Timbuwarra」の詳細全文を読む
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