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Blogs about: Sepik
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... of Papua New Guinea with two new adventure cruises taking in the Sepik River on board the luxury ship Oceanic Discoverer in ... itineraries, exploring some of the least visited regions of the country including the remote communities of the Sepik River.
Village life along ... European explorers made first contact in the 1800s. The local Sepik people are among the greatest primitive artists on Earth, and ...
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... the only expedition cruise ship that ventures up one of the world's great rivers, the Sepik, to the remote and seldom-visited villages of Bien and Angoram. The local people live a traditional ... people is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Flowing for over 1000km from the Central Highlands to the sea, the Sepik River is one of the country's least-developed regions, and is the lifeblood of the ...
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... the only expedition cruise ship that ventures up one of the world's great rivers, the Sepik, to the remote and seldom-visited villages of Bien and Angoram. The local people live a traditional ... people is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Flowing for over 1000km from the Central Highlands to the sea, the Sepik River is one of the country's least-developed regions, and is the lifeblood of the ...
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... insight into the Grand Chief's corporate rationale may be found in a document from the East Sepik Provincial Government during his son’s administration, a little something called the East Sepik Provincial Corporate Plan 2004.
  I reproduce it verbatim (believe me):
Key Watershed Thoughts
Watershed of your resolutions
Five words or ...
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... , Think Manet: Divinity Fudge, 1997)
Ann Summa, Ron Athey, 2002
Andres Serrano, Sh*t Self-Portrait, 2008
Yipwon, Sepik River, Papua New Guinea
Tambaran (Spirit House, Men's Society House), Sepik River, Papa New Guinea
Ron Mueck, Mother and Child, 2001
Womanhouse catalog, 1972
Judy Chicago, Menstruation Bathroom, 1972 ...
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... the tribal hunter-gatherers who live along the banks of the island’s longest river, the Sepik. This culture is intrinsically entwined with crocodiles, and the men’s massive scarification reflects the animal’s scales.
Living in communal longhouses, Sepik River people are famous for their wood-carvings. Varying in style from village to village, ...
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