Project Name: Nakas: Marks of Matriliny
Location: Oceania Exhibition, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Commissioner: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Materials: Copper Sheet, verdigris and brown florentine patina, iron, rust
Dimensions: 7.6 x 2.2m
Poised on the Museum’s boundary with Central Park, the eight copper panels - installed on the opposite ends of the ceremonial house ceiling - create a ‘skin” intended to shield and protect the ancestral works on display. Their etched design relates to motifs stitched into the tuhu (hood) of woven pandanus that the artist received at birth from female relatives on her father’s side. The inscriptions identify her clan, Nakas, and lineage. On Buka Island, where Havini was born, land is conceived of as skin, passed down by women and aligned with nurturing principles of life and vitality.
Havini’s use of patinated cobalt-blue copper speaks directly to the environmental consequences of the decades of exhaustive mining that have decimated the interior of Buka Island and made the rivers literally run blue. Reflecting on the detrimental effects of disrupting kastom, the customary practices that bind people to their ancestral lands, the artist conceived this site-specific installation to safeguard the cultural treasures held within the Oceania galleries.