Dilly Bag

by Robyn Nabegeyo

size: 28 x 18 cm

 

One of a kind, available now.

 

 

The dilly bag is traditionally used as a woven collecting basket. These baskets or bags made from varied natural materials, such as sand palm, pandanus or vine. The baskets are used to collect a variety of foods such as fish caught in conical fish traps, collections of yams or various other bush foods.

Traditional bush honey collecting bags can also be made from Pandanus spiralis. These dilly bags are very finely made, tightly woven collecting baskets. They are often used to collect sugarbag—the native honey.

The tightly woven surface painted with natural pigments, again imparting a ceremonial association. Woven and dyed dilly bags were commonly used for hunting and the containment of personal possessions, whereas painted bags are more commonly the domain of ceremony. These bags, however, have a break in the painted bands towards the back end of the bag, (as often woven ridges of more sculpted bags are also broken at the back) to allow a smooth surface which is the area in contact with the wearer’s body.

The close weave is indicative of honey-collecting bags made for hunting sugar bag or wild/bush honey. In addition to a tight weave, the embedding of wax into the base ensures a 'fluid-tight' vessel.

The creation story in Kakadu and West Arnhem centres on a female ancestor, the mother known as Yingarna, who emerged from the Arafura Sea and travelled across the inland regions. Yingarna gave birth to bininj (aboriginal people), the people of this country, and taught them their language. Suspended from a headband were many dilly bags, once of which that contained yams, which sheplanted and taught bininj how to harvest.

As well as being of practical use, dilly bags are also of spiritual significance to  Arnhem Land people. Dilly bags are said to be totemic objects and are associated with particular sites in the landscape.