Oceanic Art
Across
- 2. Area of Australia and Pacific islands, such as Hawaii, Easter Island, the Marshall Islands, and New Guinea.
- 4. Commonly known as the "Easter Island heads." They are large rock sculptures of human figures, created sometime between 1250 and 1500 CE.
- 7. Charts used to help Micronesians to navigate the ocean. Made of organic materials as coconut fronds, coral and shells.
- 10. New Ireland wood carvings created to honor those who have recently died and to help send the person’s spirit to the ancestors.
- 12. A smaller human stone sculpture created by Polynesian cultures
- 13. Four types of rock painting in western Australia (Tassel, Sash, Elegant Action and Clothes Peg)
- 14. A culture thought to be the common ancestor for some of the Pacific cultures, including cultures in Micronesia, Polynesia, and some of the coastal areas of Melanesia
- 15. Indigenous Polynesian people
- 18. Area includes Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, and Fiji. Diverse utilitarian art included Bisj ritual poles created by Asmat culture.
- 19. The art here is still relatively unknown compared to other areas of Oceania, mostly it is ocean themed. The area consist of about 2,500 islands.
- 20. The culture that carved the Moai
- 21. A charm that had an abstract human form and the legs were made from the spines of stingrays.
Down
- 1. Aboriginal Australian paintings based on mythology of rain and cloud spirits; one style of rock art also goes by this name.
- 3. Islands within the general triangle formed by Hawaii, New Zealand, and Easter Island
- 5. Aboriginal cultures believed the world was created by ancestral totemic spirits during this period.
- 6. Water vessel with one or more supports on either side.
- 8. Large Polynesian rock sculptures of the upper human body
- 9. Art practiced by Aboriginal groups, made from inner strips of tree that are painted or decorated. Style varies by location.
- 11. These are used to help people navigate the ocean, noting the ocean swell patterns, island placements, and so on.
- 16. Carved from a single piece of wood, it depicts multiple humans standing on top of each other.
- 17. A community meeting place for performing ceremonies, and all formal functions.