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Kirbaji (Dugong) and Ngawiya (Sea Turtle)

Kirbaji (Dugong) and Ngawiya (Sea Turtle) are two ancestral spirit beings (Totems) that I inherited from my mother’s side. As a young boy my uncles and cousins took me out to sea teaching me how to hunt, cut and cook dugong and sea turtle. Only men were allowed to hunt them for very special occasions when lots of extended family members had to be fed during wedding, birth and funeral celebrations.  They wrapped the meat in ginger leaves to get flavours and enclose them using a vine before cooking the meat it in a ground oven. Parts of the meat, fat and blood can also be boiled in the turtle shell to make a nourishing soup. The fat of the turtle was also melted to make a body oil.

Name: Laurence Gibson


Language: Kuku Yalanji


Community: Mossman


Biography:

My father is a Kuku Nyungkul man from Schiffon Flat and my mother is a Kuku Yalanji from Mossman Gorge. My mum used to paint at home and she inspired me to become an artist myself. I prefer doing pencil drawings - I’ve been sketching all my life. I like large figure outlines.

It was my partner, Vanessa Cannon, who first encouraged me to come with her to Yalanji Arts. I like working with and learning from her. Now, my practice has expanded and I do my line drawings on ceramics (sgrafitto) and create drawings for printing on textiles and paper.

My totem is the Cassowary. It was bestowed on me by my Grandfather. He taught me how to dance the Cassowary dance which l sometimes perform for public events. Not only have I performed this sacred dance in Mossman, but across the world in Hong Kong in the 1990s.

I’m happy when I can make art. It relaxes me. My main subjects are the cassowary, echidna, dugong, barramundi, scrub fowl, and brush turkey. My main aim is to pass my knowledge onto the younger generations.

 


© the artist / art centre