Wooden painted shark from the front.

Guykuḏa Munuŋgurr

Wooden painted shark from the back.

Guykuḏa Munuŋgurr

mäṉa

According to the public version of the story, this ancestral being began his journey along the coast of north-east Arnhem Land. While sleeping on the beach, mäṉa was speared by an ancestor from another clan who did not want other creator beings near him. Enraged by this stealthy attack, mäṉa charged inland from the sea, exploding into the landscape.

The ancestral shark gouged his way inland using his teeth to carve out several river systems. As he journeyed onward, his teeth broke off on the hard riverbanks and these lost teeth became the pandanus trees that line rivers today. The leaves of these trees are dagger-shaped with serrated edges, like shark teeth. The trees represent both mäṉa’s anger at being speared and the stingray-spine-tipped spear that mäṉa carried to avenge his death.

  • ArtistGuykuḏa Munuŋgurr
  • Date2018
  • DimensionsOverall: 270 × 700 × 215 mm
  • MediumEarth pigments on native hibiscus
  • Common nameAncestral shark
  • OriginYirrkala, Northern Territory
  • Object number55922