Something Fishy Going On At Griffith Pioneer Park Museum
The Hands On Weavers, with artists Peter Ingram and Shelby-Rae Lyons-Kschenka, have created Gugabul, an impressive representation of a cod. Photo by Jason Richardson.
Griffith Pioneer Park Museum has landed a whopper of a new exhibition featuring Murray Cod, one of the largest freshwater fish in the world and an apex predator in the waterways where they live.
"Gugabul" is an impressive representation of this species and was created by the Hands On Weavers with artists Peter Ingram and Shelby-Rae Lyons-Kschenka.
The name Gugabul comes from the Wiradjuri word for this fish, which is a totem for some of their nation and a sentinel for healthy rivers.
Aunty Lorraine Tye produced a colourful animation to accompany the Dreamtime-sized sculpture and share a legend from along the rivers.
Museum curator, Jason Richardson said it was wonderful to be able to show a variety of perspectives on Murray Cod.
"The details about how an ancestor created the bends in the rivers have been shared even more widely than these fish are known to travel -- which research has shown can be 120km," Mr Richardson said.
The exhibition also includes observations from Europeans like John Oxley, Charles Sturt and Mary Gilmore, as well as details like why these fish make great fathers.
In recent years the Murray Cod has become a premium aquaculture product that’s grown in our region and one that has developed from the research of John Lake, who the Narrandera Fisheries Centre is named after.
"There's a lot to learn about this distinctive creature and something for everyone," Mr Richardson said.
Come and meet Gugabul in the Irrigation Museum building at Griffith Pioneer Park Museum, which is open seven days a week.
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