The Arts of Oceania Map | Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

This dynamic animated map visually traces the early migration of the ancestors of Papuan-speaking peoples and the later migrations of Austronesian-speaking voyagers.

The astounding mobility of Oceanic peoples over millennia was a catalyst for the flourishing of a kaleidoscopic range of cultures and languages across some ten thousand islands. In this vast cosmopolitan network, spanning one third of the globe, islands are departure points as well as destinations. This dynamic animated map visually traces the early migration of the ancestors of Papuan-speaking peoples across the Sahul continental shelf and the later migrations of Austronesian-speaking voyagers across vast ocean distances. Just as vessels connect people to places, artworks also act as vessels, connecting an expansive network of communities and channeling the past into the present-future. Solwara, Moananuiākea, Te Moananui a Kiwa, Moana are Indigenous names given to this region. This animation features a visualization of the Pacific worldview by artist Sean Connelly.


Contributors

Contributors:
Maia Nuku, Evelyn A. J. Hall and John A. Friede Curator for Oceanic Art
Sylvia Cockburn, Senior Research Associate for the Arts of Oceania
Maggie Wander, former Senior Research Associate, Arts of Oceania
Geoffrey Wallace, Cartographer

Production Company: Motion Principles Studio
Spheric Oceania (2024) by Sean Connelly

Director and Managing Producer: Mandy Kritzeck
Executive Producer: Sarah Wambold
Senior Graphic Designer: Tiffany Kim
Design Manager: Alexandre Viault
Editor: Alison Tretter
Studio Manager: Erin Stella

Special Thanks to
Hannah Chen
Malvika Dang
Doris Zhao


Visualization of Oceania from a top down hemispheric perspective
Sean Connelly's Spheric Oceania offers an alternative cartography, mapping Oceania as a cosmic container of ancestral connection.
Maggie Wander and Sean Connelly
August 20, 2025
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